Automatic Movement Loud Click
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By Embezelled · Posted
Hi all, I'm about to take my first steps into watch repair as a hobby, and looking into buying a basic and inexpensive stereo optical microscope from AliExpress. My main purpose is simply something I can use in addition to eye and head loupes, or in place of them, during disassembly and reassembly work. So I assume that means something that has only modest magnification at the low end or uses a Barlow lens to bring it down. And perhaps with a tiltable head. I really don't have an interest in combining it with camera work, I simply want it for viewing the movement at appropriate magnifications as I check things or use tools on the movement. Without asking for specific model recommendations, can anyone point me to the kind of model shown on the Ali website that might suit my purpose? I've been reading two of the threads about microscopes, very informative, but it's a lot to digest for the uninitiated. -
I can't even see the 3.55 you've shown when I search Cousins for the 2892-A2?
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That's another interesting solution. Thanks for that. Aren't the Elgin staffs specifically designed to be a friction fit rather than riveted?
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By nickelsilver · Posted
The pushing out method in modern times comes from Rolex, and they have specifically made staffs to accommodate it. I believe Elgin did something similar in the past. If you don't have a lathe, then a Platax or something like the K&D tool that holds the balance arms firmly down is the best. Still a risk of opening the hole. If you have a monometallic balance (no steel) you can soak in a saturated solution if aluminum to dissolve the staff. This won't harm the balance, and is preferable to punching out. -
The same tool will work on all sizes of balance. You sit the staff in the correct size hole in the staking set base. The tool them clamps the balance arms, and then the punch pushes the staff out.
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