. 24/7 Space News .
Watchmaker With Time To Lose

Garo Anserlian, master watch and clockmaker is helping the various Mars teams keep the right time on different planets

Pasadena (JPL) Jan 12, 2004
They said it couldn't be done. But in the sleepy little town of Montrose, California, nestled in the hills surrounding JPL, master watchmaker Garo Anserlian of Executive Jewelers is perfecting a timepiece for hundreds of Earthlings bound to Mars' irregular day. Past the glass cases of what looks like an ordinary jewelry store is a workshop where watches are losing 39 minutes a day.

Rover controllers have to monitor Spirit (and soon, Opportunity) all the time; this doesn't just mean 24 hours a day " it means 24 hours, 39 minutes a day. The martian day is longer than Earth's, but this minimal variance can amount to physical and mental fatigue. Every day, team members are reporting to work 39 minutes later than the previous day.

"Everything on this mission is based on local solar time on Mars," said Julie Townsend, Mars Exploration Rover avionics systems engineer. "From home, during the mission practice tests, it was very difficult to constantly translate Earth time to Mars time."

Townsend and her co-worker Scott Doudrick, a systems engineer on the project, set out to find a solution for this otherwordly problem. The pair began to ask watchmakers to tackle the challenge but each one turned them away, saying that it couldn't be done unless they placed a large order (10,000 plus) for quartz-controlled watches; they insisted that attempting to convert mechanical watches was not possible.

A neighborhood store located on a strip of distinct specialty shops "not a chain store in sight " Garo's workshop is far from a cookie-cutter assembly line. Tables covered with disassembled watches and clocks seem to mirror the intent watchmaker's mind; taking things apart and fixing them is, for him, second nature.

"When I do something I like to know the maximum about it," he stressed. "This is not just a hobby, it is my career."

A man who found his passion at the age of eight, an underling to his father, now guides his own young apprentice, nine-year-old son, David. Clearly enamored of his father, David relayed his own novice clock-making prowess and declared that he would one day take over the store. When he does inherit the business, he will have benefited from his father's finely honed skills, acquired under master watch and clockmakers in Switzerland and Germany.

Garo acknowledged that the Mars watch request is the strangest he has ever received. It took him about two months to design, fine-tune and streamline the process that would keep the watch on Mars time.

"Since I was a young child I've put my heart into making very precise time pieces, now I was being asked to create a watch that was slow on purpose " it was going to be a challenge if it was even possible," Garo said. "I spent more than $1,000 trying to figure this out " damaging watches, trying different parts, just searching for a way."

Watchmaking is a careful process that involves very small parts and wheels. In order to make the watches useful to the Mars Exploration Rover team, Garo had to physically attach additional specific lead weights thus precisely altering the movement of the wheels and hands on certain existing famous-maker wristwatches. Working on the 21-jeweled self-winding mechanical wristwatches was sometimes frustrating.

"At one point my helpers and I looked at each other and said "'forget it, we're wasting time and money.'" But Townsend and Doudrick wouldn't let him quit. The two came by his shop every week, assuring him that his highly anticipated watches would be a valuable asset to the team.

Garo finished Doudrick's watch first and after initial testing, discovered that it was off by no more than ten seconds in 24 hours Earth time " an amazingly accurate feat for an entirely mechanical watch. Now, when the store is fully staffed, the experts can retrofit and thus create about ten watches per day. After he accommodates all rover team members who wish to own a custom-made Mars watch, he will market his patented rarity to the public.

Garo watched with million of others as mission control described Spirit's near-perfect landing. But his connection to the mission was personal.

"I felt proud; I got goosebumps," he said. "I saw that some of them had two watches on and I thought, one of them was mine! I was proud as an American that it landed and secondly that my watches will be used."

Used, indeed, by a team of scientists and engineers who looked to a truly old world craft for a solution to a very modern problem. And like the rover team, that faced countless challenges and criticism, Garo gets to say, "I told you so" to those who said it couldn't be done.

Related Links
Mars at JPL
MERs at Cornell
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


APS X-rays Reveal Secrets Of The Martian Core
Argonne - Jan 12, 2004
While astronomers peer at the surface of Mars, now making its closest approach to Earth in 60,000 years, scientists are learning the secrets of its deep interior using the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne.







  • Getting Man On Mars Will Need More Than Just Rhetoric
  • US Again Aiming For Moon - As A Pit Stop To Mars And Beyond
  • Bush Could Announce New Manned Space Missions To Moon And Mars
  • Bush Set To Send America Back To Moon

  • NASA Research Enhances Benefits Of Plant Experiments
  • Spirit's Surroundings Beckon In Color Panorama
  • Spirit Rover Nearly Ready to Roll
  • AFRL Computer Guides NASA Rovers to Mars

  • Sea Launch Successfully Deploys Telstar 14/Estrela do Sul 1 to Orbit
  • Arianespace Maintains Pole Position In Civil Launch Market
  • Sea Launch Embarks on the First Mission of 2004
  • ILS Closes out 2003 with 6 Successful Launches, 11 New Awards

  • MDA Signs 4 RADARSAT-1 Data Agreement Renewals
  • Orbimage Officially Emerges From Chapter 11
  • First Set of Images from OrbView-3 Satellite Released
  • Disaster Monitoring Constellation Partners Hold 4th Meeting

  • First Detection Of CO In Uranus
  • Pushing Out The Kuiper Belt
  • New Horizons Mission Team Plans Jupiter Encounter
  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis

  • Interstellar Hydrogen Shadow Observed For The First Time
  • Three-Ton Science Experiment To Cruise South Pole Skies For Cosmic Rays
  • NASA Selects SwRI Proposal To Study Interstellar Boundary
  • New View Of Milky Way In Gamma Rays

  • SMART-1 Finally Escapes the Radiation Belts
  • SMART-1 Chalks Up Another 2K On The Long Way To The Moon
  • Overall Status, Current Activities And Planned Activities
  • SMART-1 Is Flying At Full Speed

  • CSR Finds Its Way Into Navman Wireless Car Navigation System
  • SkyBitz Secures $16 Million in Financing Motorola Deal
  • US Air Force Awards Lockheed Martin Team Study Contract For NextGen GPS System
  • Digital Angel Corp Promotes Livestock Tracker In Wake Of Mad Cow

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement