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Help with hair springs


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I need to learn how to identify different types of hairsprings.  I can work with them, reshape, remove from the staff etc.  what I can’t seem to figure out is...

1. How to tell the difference between hairsprings: size, strength or the proper terms to describe what I’m looking at and may need to order.

2.  Where to order a new one.

i have looked on J Boral, essinger, Casker, Cousins and Perrin.  I can’t seem to find a place to buy replacement springs or balance complete.  Well, I did find balance complete on Cousins.  But I don’t know the difference between “ordinary” or extraordinary... much less decipher which one I may need.

 

i need to learn about hairspring identification, classification and more.

 

any suggested books, videos, reference or Devine enlightenment?

thank you, team!

Edited by ITProDad
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The tricky thing with hairsprings is that nobody supplies them as spare parts. There may be some old stock laying around here and there, they come up regularly on Ebay.

 

As for classification, there are several materials. Steel, beryllium, and Nivarox (alloy springs, that would include Elinvar). The beryllium and alloy springs are to be used with monometallic uncut balances, and steel with bimetallic cut balances. They are graded by CGS number, which basically goes from small, like 0.05 for the tiniest movement, up to 25 or so for a large pocket or deck watch. To find out which CGS you need, you need a spring that just looks kind of right, which you vibrate to the balance, and then take measurements and compare that to the final diameter of spring you desire. This is a matter of movement design, but does sort of follow a pattern.

 

Bottom line is you need a lot of springs on hand to do any real hairspring work, which means buying up as many as you can find for years.

 

Here's a thread from a while back with some good info:

 

Edited by nickelsilver
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8 hours ago, ITProDad said:

Well, I did find balance complete on Cousins.  But I don’t know the difference between “ordinary” or extraordinary... much less decipher which one I may need.

Balance is the main area where the Swiss made diversification and grading of a same mov't. Before shock-proof became universal the base version was the ordinary, shock-proof was one step up. Another variance could be the rim, smooth  -"annulaire" or with poising stubs or screws -"a vis". Then the material used as explained by Master nickelsiver. In some cases, the option was a Breguet hairsping and free sprung balances.

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