Jump to content

Marvin 580 'Bestfit' help


Recommended Posts

Marvin was (is!) a long-established brand that mainly used bought in movements from the likes of ETA, AS and Felsa for its watches. They did however produce an in-house movement in the mid-1950s called the 580 (which came in a few variants). Can anyone help me, perhaps a guru with a Bestfit Encyclopedia, on whether this 580 was literally a unique design by Marvin or based on a more common movement and thus there are part interchangeability options? I've scoured the internet but found it difficult to come up with any useful information or documents on the 580. Any help would be gratefully received.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow - that is brilliant; thank @oldhippy :biggrin:

Your document extensively mentions the ETA 2890 / 2 movements which a quick check on ranfft says came into being in the mid-1970s as a 12.5''' movement. And yet the 580 (and specifically the 580C which I'm most interested in with the calendar mech which I assume is also ETA 2890 / 2 related?) was designed in the mid-1950s ... as well as being a 11.5''' movement.

My reading around the little on the 580 that exists is that it was an in-house design by Marvin but this Bestfit information suggests that ETA pinched this design to turn into the 2890. Sure the 2890 had predecessors of the Eterna 1504 but, that again, was a 1970's movement. Interesting!

I'm going to look into getting a Bestfit Encyclopedia of my own so I can research this more!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you very much J (@noirrac1j) - that's incredibly helpful.

I've managed so far without a Bestfit Encyclopedia ... and in any case always thought they were weighty vintage tomes with a corresponding weighty price. This thread has prompted me to look closer and find that I can actually get an electronic copy online for relatively little money. It's now on my shopping list!

The main reason for this thread is that sourcing 580C parts has proved difficult so I'm going to see if I can 'BestFit' from other sources. Interesting, for instance, to see that a calendar intermediate wheel comes from a Record 107C! 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • So I found what I believe is the setting lever screw! Am I right in thinking the screw next to the click is the correct one for the setting lever? However if it is, it doesn't fit in the hole which I believe is for it! I can get the lever to sit nicely on the stem and line up with a hole, but the screw only goes as far as the shoulder and stops. It's as though the hole is too small! The dial side has been disassembled by the way, the other wheels are in my tray
    • When faced with say a pocket watch bridge which is cracked, silver soldering to repair is often the only option (hopefully someone wasn't there before hand with soft solder). I can generally do this succesfully and tidily with a small torch and miniscule pieces of silver solder, but on parts which were mercury amalgam gilded the heat can have have a deleterious effect on the finish.   I keep wondering if there's a good way to refinish these - and despite having the needful items would rather avoid using the mercury process.   In the past for electronic work I've gold plated PCBs but this involved gold potassium cyanide solution, which also doesn't realy belong at home. I've read that there are now safer alternatives but couldn't find more detail (and importantly how similar are the results to amalgam gilding, since I wouldn't want to refinish the whole watch). Pointers would be very welcome (and yes, I know solutions containing gold won't be cheap!) Alan
    • The first one is an Unruh max stake for pushing out staffs
    • Ok so with the great answers for my previous question may I ask what these two attachments are used for. The one with the red knob is I assume used for hand setting the seconds hand? Jon      
    • According to Cousins site I need to look at document G22 as I think I need an ATGB at 304 but I cant find this size in G22 doc. The last thing I want to do is order the wrong one😳  Unless I cant see the wood for the trees 😆 I could be looking at the wrong style, I assume its classed as Round plastic Armed  https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/wide-ring-gold-atgb
×
×
  • Create New...