 I'm Malcolm Archer, a I've been working on this regulated clock made by Benjamin Gray and Justin Volumi. It's a very interesting clock. It's had various alterations and changes made to it by the Volumi's. It's a fascinating clock, not just because it's a regulator, but because of the complexity of the designs that have been built into this and the historical background. The Escapement is a kind of copy of a Harrison Grasshopper escapement, and then all of the pivots are running on anti-friction rollers, which the idea is to enable the power source to get to the escapement without too much interruption. It raises various questions about why the Volumi's wanted to include this into this clock and a game of the escapement, and there's further research going into those sort of things. So it's a fascinating clock. The work I've carried out really has been a complete disassembly and detailed photography and measurements of everything. There are one or two of these clocks in existence, and we want to compare, so we're really looking to see where this fits in historically with the other clocks that are similar to this. So I've taken measurements of almost everything, diameters of wheels, size of these plates and dial, as well as all the numbers of teeth and pinions that the clock has, so we can compare to the other clocks that are around. So it's been taken apart, it's been cleaned, some minor adjustments made to the escapement and one or two other areas, and now it's partially reassembled, ready for the dial to go back on, and the hands to be reinstalled. To be in this case, this clock is going to be running. It's a clock that's happy to run. It runs without too much maintenance required. It just needs looking after and checking very carefully, but it will run a function as it did throughout most of its history.