Watching the motion of the real Swiss railway clocks [1] with its smoothness is quite soothing.
"It requires only about 58.5 seconds to circle the face, then the hand pauses briefly at the top of the clock. It starts a new rotation as soon as it receives the next minute impulse from the master clock." [2]
I imagine that the part you find soothing is the first 58.5 seconds of each minute, where the second hand just rotates continuously rather than ticking.
But I find it really jarring that the clock stops every minute and then starts up again with a jerk.
Interesting fact. I wonder why they could not make it go round in 60 seconds exactly. Did you they have to play with some motor limitations for the seconds hand, or was it purely by design ?
It's to keep all the railway clocks in sync. You could have one that's running up to 1.5s slow and it will still be able to keep up with all the rest, and they're all resynchronised with each other every minute. This is important when it could be the difference between catching a train or not.
History and culture, it's a symbolic touchstone for the Swiss railway. It could of course be ripped out and replaced with a digital one, but would it be as well loved? Possibly, possibly not.
Because this is a mechanical clock. It has to catch 60 seconds independent of environmental conditions (weather, snow, cold etc.) which adversely affect the performance of the clock.
"It requires only about 58.5 seconds to circle the face, then the hand pauses briefly at the top of the clock. It starts a new rotation as soon as it receives the next minute impulse from the master clock." [2]
1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvIvKiDWDks 2: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_railway_clock