Awesome! Grew up in tge 70s so I missed the older clocks but always liked how different each clock in a arena looked. Never did get to see this beauty though, looks like a trip to Boston might be coming up soon. What mall?The Boston Garden clock was destroyed in 1967 - I saw it smashed in the storage area.
Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Providence and Buffalo had Bulova clocks and Mike Emrick told me Indianapolis had one as well.
I saw the Forum clock in operation at a box lacrosse game in 1965.
Montreal went digital in 1966 and the Bruins used the same company (Day Industries from Toronto) the following year and the Hawks also bought a digital clock from Day.
Montreal and Chicago would upgrade their boards in the 80's but the Bruins stayed with the 1967 model until the Garden closed in 1995. That clock lives in a Boston area mall in a food court.
I find amusing the arrows that read "SCORE" and point to, well, the score. It's a score board, for goshsakes! But there's so much other stuff on it, they have to direct you to the score. I wonder if they added those to the design at a late stage, when somebody asked "But what's the score?"
I just noticed that, for the most common version of the scoreboard ...
... nowhere does it show you the PERIOD, or the QUARTER (or HALF for college). Unless I'm missing it.
Seems strange. Now, if you're at the game, you're pretty much sure of that value, but it hurts the documentary value of a photograph. 0-0 with nine minutes to go on the clock ... is this just a slow first period, or a thrilling finish to the game pending?
This was Bulova's first venture into hockey scoreboards. As far as I've been able to research, this was the only one of this configuration that made it into an arena. It apparently didn't work as well as planned. In 1942, Bulova came out with the model we're more familiar with that has the inner and outer penalty clock dials for each team. Boston probably got the first one, Chicago got its clock before the 1943-44 season began, and then Detroit, Providence, and Indianapolis got theirs.On March 20, 1941, the Boston Bruins installed a new clock for the 1941 playoffs. It cost $40,000 ($ 641,412.08 today)
I am puzzled because this is not the same Bulova scoreboard the Garden used into the late 60's.
This was Bulova's first venture into hockey scoreboards. As far as I've been able to research, this was the only one of this configuration that made it into an arena. It apparently didn't work as well as planned. In 1942, Bulova came out with the model we're more familiar with that has the inner and outer penalty clock dials for each team. Boston probably got the first one, Chicago got its clock before the 1943-44 season began, and then Detroit, Providence, and Indianapolis got theirs.
The game clock ran clockwise. It was easier to read "12:47 played" than to try to look at the hands and subtract the number of long and short marks and think backwards to come up with time remaining. By the looks of the numbers on the penalty clocks, it appears that the hands on both the inner and outer part of the dial were just minute hands and ran counterclockwise.Hi,
I need to recreate the Bulova score clock from the Detroit Olympia for scene in a movie. Can any of you fine people explain how the dials on the clock functioned? For example, the main game clock, did it count up to 20mins or down to zero? Also what are the two other team dials showing in this picture?
Many thanks!
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I think Buffalo got theirs a little later, more toward the end of WWII, unless some of the interior photos of the Aud I've seen are mis-dated. I'll check. With regard to Los Angeles, I had no idea that the Pan-Pacific Auditorium had one! You guys are such a great resource for these pieces of history....Don't forget Buffalo and Los Angeles
The game clock ran clockwise. It was easier to read "12:47 played" than to try to look at the hands and subtract the number of long and short marks and think backwards to come up with time remaining. By the looks of the numbers on the penalty clocks, it appears that the hands on both the inner and outer part of the dial were just minute hands and ran counterclockwise.
Fenway, please fill me in, because I only saw a few Bulls' games at Chicago Stadium in their early years---but for NBA games, didn't the control panel allow the timekeeper to set the start of a period at the eight-minute mark so that when the clock started, there were 12 minutes to be played and the end of a period ended with both hands straight up?Boston Garden for the NBA
So it started straight up and ran clockwise to the neon 2?The penalty clocks in Boston ran clockwise and a green neon 2 would light up for a minor penalty.
CorrectSo it started straight up and ran clockwise to the neon 2?
Fenway, please fill me in, because I only saw a few Bulls' games at Chicago Stadium in their early years---but for NBA games, didn't the control panel allow the timekeeper to set the start of a period at the eight-minute mark so that when the clock started, there were 12 minutes to be played and the end of a period ended with both hands straight up?
The Boston Garden clock was destroyed in 1967 - I saw it smashed in the storage area.
Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Providence and Buffalo had Bulova clocks and Mike Emrick told me Indianapolis had one as well.
I saw the Forum clock in operation at a box lacrosse game in 1965.
Montreal went digital in 1966 and the Bruins used the same company (Day Industries from Toronto) the following year and the Hawks also bought a digital clock from Day.
Montreal and Chicago would upgrade their boards in the 80's but the Bruins stayed with the 1967 model until the Garden closed in 1995. That clock lives in a Boston area mall in a food court.
In Boston, they wound up installing a neon 12 because NBA coaches could never figure the clock out. That was done for the 65-66 season after this happened.
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When I was young the Boston Garden had this clock which dated back to around 1940.
The same clock was at Olympia-Detroit, Chicago Stadium, Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo and the R.I Auditorium in Providence. There was also a one sided version at the old Boston Arena.
The Chicago clock lasted to at least 1971.
Anybody have more info on these clocks?
Please post a picture of the clock.
I should remember, as we had season's tickets to the Wings at the old Olympia.
I have to say, I don't remember that.
I don't recall anything like the massive overhanging thing from the Garden you posted.
Most of the time, I tracked the score and time left on relatively minor "strips" affixed below the rafter seats (sic).