Big Ben will ring again

(London) To get as close as possible to Big Ben, you need earplugs and noise-canceling headphones to protect your eardrums. And when the 13.7 ton bell rings, the vibrations can be felt right through the chest.

Posted at 10:05 a.m.

Jitendra JOSHI
France Media Agency

After five long years of renovation, the most famous clock in the world officially comes out of its silence on Sunday and will start telling the time to Londoners again.

The emblematic clock, which dominates the British parliament, will thus return to its usual rhythm after the meticulous cleaning of more than 1000 parts that compose it.

In August 2017, more than a thousand people gathered outside Parliament to listen religiously to the last twelve strokes of Big Ben and the four other smaller bells that accompany it. Some had even shed a tear, believing they were losing part of their city.

Many should meet again on Sunday at 6 a.m. to hear this symbol of London resonate. The carillon of four bells will then ring every quarter hour, and Big Ben every hour as it had done for 158 years before its renovation.

The date coincides with Remembrance Sunday, celebrated on the Sunday following November 11 to celebrate the armistice of the First World War.

In five years, the clock has rung on a few rare occasions thanks to a substitute electric mechanism, such as recently for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II who died on September 8.

Perched at the top of the Elizabeth Tower – 96 meters high – the bells are protected by an external net to prevent bats and pigeons from rushing into the belfry.

From up there, the view of London is spectacular, but the three watchmakers in charge of the proper functioning of Big Ben do not have time to enjoy it.

Ian Westworth, 60, and his colleagues are too busy finalizing final tests and making sure everything is working properly after the 80 million pound ($125 million) renovation.

London calling


PHOTO UK PARLIAMENT/JESSICA TAYLOR, VIA REUTERS

Lindsay Hoyle, British Speaker of the House of Commons, visits Big Ben.

“It’s the sound of London that is back,” the watchmaker told AFP during a morning tour of the tower.

“The bells rang during the wars”, he marvels, underlining the extent of the transformations of the city which they have witnessed.

The Elizabeth Tower, the new name given to the Clock Tower in 2012 on the occasion of the monarch’s Diamond Jubilee, was built in the 1840s.

If it dominated at the time the district of Westminster, more imposing buildings have since emerged.

“Before, on a calm night, you could hear (Big Ben) up to 15 miles (24 km) away,” recalls Mr. Westworth. “Now you’re lucky if you hear it from the other side of Parliament. »

During the works, various parts of the bells were cleaned and repainted, but the bells themselves did not move. Big Ben is so imposing that moving it would require destroying the floor of the tower.

The most difficult task of the works was to remove the mechanism of the clock, heavy of 11.5 tons and dating from 1859, in order to clean the cogs.

In addition, 28 bulbs now illuminate the four faces of the clock, with tones ranging from green to white to resemble as closely as possible the gas bulbs of the Victorian era.

Another bulb, white, sits above the bells to indicate when parliament is sitting.

GPS Calibration


PHOTO UK PARLIAMENT/JESSICA TAYLOR, VIA REUTERS

When Big Ben’s 13.7-tonne bell rings, the vibrations can be felt right through your chest.

Before the renovation, watchmakers checked the accuracy of the time with telephones. From now on, the clock is calibrated by GPS thanks to the National Physics Laboratory.

But the method for adjusting the time remains very traditional: old coins are used to add or remove weight from the gigantic springs of the clock, making it possible to gain or lose a second.

As a new hour approaches, it’s time to put on your earplugs and headphones to witness another test.

It is 7 a.m., Big Ben — a symbol of stability in a chaotic British political context — rings seven times with a deafening vibrato.

But Ian Westworth and his 35-year-old colleague, Alex Jeffrey, remain focused on their job: looking after the 2,000 clocks in parliament.

“Every day, you tell the time in a very manual way, using technology, art and craftsmanship,” summarizes Mr. Jeffrey. “It’s the best job in the world. »


source site-50