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Oiling Pivots w/ no jewels


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Yes you should oil. The trick is movements like the one showed do not have oil wells. So be careful not to over oil, You do not want to flood the plate, so make sure it doesn't come out over the pivots circle.

The tiniest amount of oil on the pallet pivots.  

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It is not like a well you would have if the pivot were jewelled. Besides those circles are so big if you filled them with oil you would flood the plates and the movement would not work correctly. He is a new member and at a guess inexperienced.    

 

BobHadababyitsab, no question is dumb.

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  • 4 years later...
6 hours ago, 316lad said:

9010 be the stuff to use

9020 would be better as it's less likely to spread. 9010 has a habit of spreading unless you use epilam.

Out of curiosity I was looking at whatever time makes manuals I have because Timex is famous for no jewels. So their update the lubrication and 74 formally had them using ELGIN M56B Oil which is outstanding oil that has a habit of not spreading but hard to get because Elgin wasn't making it anymore. So their recommendation is 9010. Then in the service guides themselves the use the Words carefully metered  Which is exactly what oldhippy Was describing.

 

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Epilam is very expensive. As I said just a tiny drop of oil is needed, if you do that it wont run all over the place.  Pallets/ escape wheel, A tiny drop on every other tooth of the escape wheel and the contact of the pallet pins will pick up enough to spread it around the rest of the teeth. Going about it this way you do not need to oil the pallet pins.  

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    • Yea a have given it a full service this movement is chinese 2813 whats the left angle for this movement does anyone knows  and how to do a remove the default 52 degrees on my timegrapher?
    • Sure! Some very accomplished repairers never use epilame! I have often wondered if it is worth the trouble. Not using epilame will shorten the service intervals though, but that could be better perhaps both for the owner and the repairer!? Speaking of oiling, I just read this: After WWII in the 1950s the first Synthetic Oils came on the market. Most watchmakers did not rush to use these oils since they were bad for business now that the watch serviced with Synthetic oil would not come back to him for service for another 5-7 years he would lose a lot of income. ~Ofrei.com   Anyway, I wouldn't be surprised if it would be more correct to think of epilame as a binder rather than a repellant. Until convinced otherwise that's how I will think of epilame.
    • I read that same article last night  H.  I think epilame is too much headache for me, sources aren't always accurate, some conflicting. Such is the GRAVITY of this situation, Is it ok if i just STICK  to a thixotropic oil 🤣
    • Not sure I follow along. As I stated in one of my previous posts, the epilame will remain intact between rubbing parts as long as the surface is lubricated by oil or grease. Maybe it's just a coincidence, but note how the epilame-treated surface is illustrated in @Waggy's post. It looks like the oil is exposed to a binder (epilame!) so that it can't move sideways.
    • The epilame under the oil will also be removed  Unless the oil makes a barrier between the epilame and the escape teeth 😅 I think i need two strong coffees now 🤣
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