-
Acosta leaves it late to go fastest in Malaysian MotoGP practice
-
Patrick Reed: Bad press stings, but leave my kids out of it
-
George Clooney explores passage of time in Netflix film 'Jay Kelly'
-
Young bodybuilders lift Japan's ailing care sector
-
Stocks rally as traders cheer Trump-Xi meeting plan
-
China, US 'can find ways to resolve concerns' as negotiators set to meet
-
Trump says all Canada trade talks 'terminated'
-
New Japan PM vows to take US ties to 'new heights' with Trump
-
Women sue over sexual abuse in Australian military
-
South Korea says 'considerable' chance Kim, Trump will meet next week
-
Brazil's Lula says would tell Trump tariffs were 'mistake'
-
Trump's Asia tour set to spotlight trade challenges
-
Ivorian brothers dream of transforming cocoa industry
-
Over 1,000 enter Thailand from Myanmar after scam hub raid
-
Top Nigerian environmentalist sees little coming out of COP30
-
Europe must nurse itself after US aid cuts: WHO director
-
Venezuela's Maduro to US: 'No crazy war, please!'
-
US, Japanese firms unwittingly hired North Korean animators: report
-
Precision timing for Britain's Big Ben as clocks go back
-
False claim spreads of Japan 'mass deportations' ministry
-
Alaska Airlines grounds entire fleet over IT outage
-
Ecuador's president says he was target of attempted poisoning
-
Rybakina seals WTA Finals spot in reaching Tokyo semis
-
Aldeguer fastest in rain-hit Malaysian MotoGP practice
-
Herbert's three TD passes lead Chargers NFL rout of Vikings
-
Gilgeous-Alexander hits career-high 55 in Thunder double overtime win
-
Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN
-
India trials Delhi cloud seeding to combat deadly smog
-
Top 14 offers France scrum-halves last audition as Dupont replacement
-
Mbappe's Real Madrid aiming to end Barca Clasico dominance
-
Ashes in from the wilderness as England take on Australia
-
High-flying Bayern pull away early in Bundesliga with Kane in complete control
-
Isak-less Liverpool look to hit stride, Man City 'back' to their best
-
Asian stocks rally as traders cheer Trump-Xi meeting plan
-
Japan inflation rises as new PM eyes economic package
-
UK to press 'coalition of willing' for more long-range missiles for Ukraine
-
Surgeons remove up to 100 magnets from N. Zealand teen's gut
-
Guayaquil mayor blames Ecuador's president as drug violence spirals
-
Autistic adults push back on 'fear-based' Trump rhetoric
-
New frontline in Canada-US tensions: the World Series
-
Champion de Crespigny surprised to be named Wallabies skipper
-
Trump completes demolition of White House East Wing: satellite images
-
Ohtani ready for 'big series' as Dodgers face Blue Jays
-
EU leaders lay out conditions for emissions target deal
-
EU takes small step towards using Russian assets for Ukraine
-
White House's East Wing demolished for Trump ballroom: satellite images
-
Bajic stuns Palace in Conference League
-
Anthropic announces massive AI chip deal with Google
-
Piastri confirms McLaren 'clean slate' after Texas tussle
-
Forest beat Porto on Dyche debut, Villa shocked by Go Ahead Eagles
Precision timing for Britain's Big Ben as clocks go back
British clockmaker Ian Westworth is bracing for a wave of concern this weekend from Londoners convinced the country's most famous clock Big Ben has broken down.
Towering over the UK capital and its parliament, the clock will be stopped briefly to adjust for the switch to winter time -- one of only two occasions each year when it is allowed to pause.
The change takes place at 2:00 am (0100 GMT) on Sunday, when clocks across the UK are turned back one hour to 1:00 am, marking the end of British Summer Time and the return to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
Most European countries also revert to standard time ("winter time") Sunday, although there have been calls to scrap seasonal clock changes in recent years, most recently from Spain's leader Pedro Sanchez on Monday.
"We come up here and stop the Great Clock -- we really stop it," said Westworth, 63, who has worked in the Palace of Westminster's clock department for over 20 years.
Officially called The Great Clock of Westminster, it and the whole building are widely known as Big Ben -- the name of the largest of the four bells in the Elizabeth Tower.
The nickname is thought to derive from Benjamin Hall who oversaw the bell's installation.
The well-oiled process of turning the clock back begins around 6:00 pm Saturday, Westworth said.
It includes silencing the chimes and switching off the dial lights to avoid passers-by seeing the clock showing an incorrect time.
With the clock paused, the four-person team carries out a full maintenance check, which this year includes tracking down the source of an audible squeak that occurs around the quarter to the hour mark.
"We'll take it apart, service it, put it back together again," Westworth said.
Once that's done the clock is set to the "new midnight".
- Life-changing lift -
"We don't switch the lights on and we don't have the bells on, but we get the clock ticking and then we've got from 12 o'clock till 2:00 am to get the time right," Westworth said.
At 2:00 am the clock's lights and bells will be switched back on.
"The Monday morning after the time change, we get a lot of emails saying, you know, your clock doesn't work, you know, or I missed my train because of you," he added.
The clock itself is checked and wound up three times a week. The minute hands are made of copper sheet while the hour hands are made of gun metal.
Getting to the clock means wearing a noise-cancelling helmet and used to entail climbing 334 steps to the top of the clock-tower. It stands 316 feet (96 m) high.
But after major renovation work was completed at the end of 2022, a service elevator was added.
"It changed our life," said Westworth, whose team looks after 2,000 clocks on the parliamentary estate, including around 400 which require winding up once a week.
"Back then, if we happened to forget a tool, we had to go all the way down and back up again. It was tough."
Aside from the lift and new LED lighting to illuminate Big Ben, the clock which dates back to 1859 remains largely the same. Before the recent renovation, his team used mobile phones to check the accuracy of the time.
Now, the clock is calibrated by GPS via the National Physical Laboratory.
Despite the pace of 21st century technology, Westworth is confident Big Ben's future is secure.
"As long as there is a good team of people behind it, we can keep this clock going for another 160 years," he said.
B.Baumann--VB