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Question on watch band/strap sizing.


MrRoundel

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Greetings, folks. I like wearing leather straps on most of my wrist watches, but many of them tend to spin around on my wrist. If I tighten them to the point of being uncomfortable, they mostly stay put. I have a small frame, so my wrist may be too small to work well with standard sized bands. And I have been wondering about whether the spinning watch syndrome could be eliminated by having a band with a smaller buckle side. In other words, I'm thinking the spin effect is exacerbated because the hole side is so much longer than the buckle side, and if the shorter bands being sold out there get shorter by merely shortening the hole end a bit. If so, the same problem might remain, despite the watch band being shorter overall.

So, are short straps shorter on both sides of the band, or just the hole side? Many thanks in advance. Cheers.

 

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Or make your own strap tailored to your size.After all it only has to fit one wrist.I like nylon.In this part of America ,you sweat a lot an leather deteriorates quickly. I use  plastic clips to fasten the band.maybe the addition of the flat spot they provide will help you out

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    • An update, for everyone who contributed advice, and for those who come after with a similar problem. Based on the answers received, I decided to work on the face of the hammer first. I used a square degussit stone to guarantee a vertical surface to work against, and ground the face back until it was square across 90% of the depth. I was conscious of the risk of removing too much material.* After I'd got the shape how I wanted it, I polished the surface with lapping film. To cut a long story short, it did the trick and the hammer hasn't slipped off the cam since. Of course, that wasn't the end of my problems. Have a look at this video and tell me what you think is wrong. https://youtu.be/sgAUMIPaw98 The first four attempts show (0 to 34 sec.) the chrono seconds hand jumping forwards, the next two attempts (35 to 47 sec.) seem "normal", then on the seventh attempt (48 to 54 sec.) the seconds hand jumps to 5 sec. and the minute counter jumps to 1. The rest of the video just shows repeats of these three variants. I solved it by rotating the minute counter finger on the chronograph (seconds) runner relative to the cam.  I'd be interested to hear your opinions on that. It seemed to be the right thing to do, but maybe I've introduced another problem I'm not aware of. * What is the correct relationship between the two hammers and cams, by the way? Should both hammers strike the cams exactly at the same time, or is it correct for the minute counter hammer to be a bit behind the seconds hammer? In this picture, I removed the adjusting screw at 1, and the hammers are contacting the cams simultaneously at 3 and 4. I had to turn the screw down tight to achieve this condition after stoning the seconds hammer and replacing the bridge.
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    • Well said Ross. My reason for the thread, i like many of us dont want to lose the forum, such a well knitted group of individuals i feel. But things can happen out of anyone's control. Would be nice to have something in place just in case, if anyone has any ideas please speak up. 
    • Ok thanks Ross, I will give that a try!😁
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