• Richard Norman
    13
    During our major bell chamber/floor/frame clean two wooden bell ties were found hidden in/under the detritus.
    They are made of wood and riddled with woodworm. No one knew about them (even me and I have examined the area but did not see them under all the dust and mortar/stone)
    One of them broke so will go onto the wood burner when it is lit but I have retained the other FTTB as they both had threaded wooden bolts to hold them together and I wonder how old they are/were?
    Does anyone have any ideas?
    I do not know how to post pictures otherwise I would put them up here.
  • Graham John
    261
    @Richard Norman - You just click on the Upload Files icon, upload the photo and click insert.
  • Richard Norman
    13
    Many thanks
    The two images shwoing the wooden screw and the thining hinges which I suspect may be blacksmithed?
    Attachments
    Smaller clapper tie IMG_2874 (102K)
    Smaller clapper tie IMG_2874 (102K)
    IMG_2875 (126K)
  • Peter Sotheran
    131
    That's rather magnificent! Whoever made it was a skilled woodworker!. Ours are rather more crude - a length of board with end blocks that fit inside the mouth of the bell and a simple metal lever held in place with a wing nut.
    vy5tu1ngfzo37gbw.jpg
    kt6utj52aru4dysl.jpg
    vkvkp50oou7jeums.jpg
  • John Harrison
    434
    That's a variant I haven't met before. The wedge enables it to fit the inside of the bell while sitting against the clapper ball. Where I learnt to ring we had internal clapper stays but they had to be pushed up to fit the inside of the bell, and keeping them there relied on a tight grip on the clapper. Where I ring now we have clapper stays with lugs that fit over the lip of the bell and don't therefore need a tight fit on the clapper shaft. See: http://jaharrison.me.uk/thb/6-4.html#6-4i
  • Richard Pargeter
    22
    The clapper tie I devised and have used now for about 35 years is on the EDA resources page; https://www.elyda.org.uk/education (second up from the bottom). The catch is held in place by the spring of the wood when bent a little around the clapper. A few photos attached as well.
    30b02m15her8ph5y.jpeg
    8hhj9creuthvoi0i.jpeg
    4bpqpqstlgski0hz.jpeg
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