The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
This type glass retainer is scarcer than hens teeth! The old coil retainer springs out of production for decades according to a local clock shop.
So, advised to make a spring retainer. From your local hardware buy a 3 ft piano wire - I chose .078 Music Wire.
Cut to length with a mallet and cold chisel. Seriously - hard spring wire!
Then bend into a circle. Start bending using progressively smaller paint cans. Avoid kinking the wire.
You want it to be a little larger circle than the brass dial ring it fits into. Also, about 1/2 inch from one end, put a bend you can grasp using pliers, because you want to be able to trial fit the spring a couple times and need one end you can grasp to remove the spring. Do not add the glass until your spring is finished.
I painted my spring with gold paint. I also polished and lacquered the dial ring to brightness to match the gold control escutcheons. Finally, instal the glass and carefully install the spring you made.
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Two photos:
-an original coil spring glass retainer - dark looking.
-my spring made from .078 Music Wire, painted gold.
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I purchased the bronze guitar string as Mike used. Now I am waiting for proper replacement glass from Ronell Clock. I measured escutcheon to require 7-3/4" glass, so I ordered that size. I got 7-7/8" glass. I sent them a picture and told them that I need 7-3/4" max dia. They sent me 2 more and they are 7-13/16" after saying they carefully measured with a steel ruler....ugg. My choices are to try grinding the diameter down slightly, or just order new 7-5/8" diameter glass seeing as though they seem to run large. For $22 delivered, I think I will just order the smaller size.
The vintage General Cement glass # 72 that I located is 7 3/4 " and fit perfectly.
Yes - see the above thread for bezel wire - using a bass guitar steel string.
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