Hipp chronoscope with small galvanometer and key
1888
Chronoscope with small galvanometer and key. Designed for measuring short intervals of time with an accuracy of 1/1000th of a second. The clockwork is governed by a metal reed which vibrates instead of a pendulum. No.13074, made by Hipp, Neuchâtel, 1888
Produced by Matthias Hipp of Neuchatel, Switzerland, this device was used to measure short intervals of time to within 1/1000th of a second. Its timekeeping element is not a pendulum but a metal reed which vibrates 1000 times per second above an escape wheel; one tooth of the escape wheel passes it every one-thousandth of a second. In use, the clockwork is kept in continuous motion and the indicating mechanism is started and stopped by electromagnets. Hipp's chronoscopes were originally used in military research experiments to measure the speed of projectiles, but achieved popularity with the advent of experimental psychology laboratories in the late 19th century, in which they were used to try to determine the speed of thought.