Jump to content

Adjusting time on lanco


gary17

Recommended Posts

The regulator arm is the one pointing towards the 6 o'clock lugs, the one pointing away from the stem is the adjustable stud carrier.

To slow the rate you rotate the regulator arm anti-clockwise, towards the stud carrier.

3 mins per hour is almost certainly beyond the range of the regulator though. I'm not sure but it looks like you may have some hairspring issues. Coils touching or stuck together; some good clear close up pics of the H/S will help to see what's going on.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi  Gary  The regulator The bit with the two pins in moves away or towards the balance pinning point, moving it away from the stud will speed it up and towards the stud slow it down but do it with care and do not damage the balance spring.  Can you let us have the calibre number.

Link to comment
Share on other sites



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I existed before the term mechatronics engineer existed. I had to combine electricity, electronics, pneumatics, hydraulics and computing just to keep my own equipment working. I have never sub contracted any of my own repairs to the suppliers because I know I could do a better job. For a long time, dental suppliers in my country would bring their dead equipment to me that their own engineers cannot handle. I have accidentally embarrassed a couple of hospital heads of engineering by demonstrating their inadequacy.  I think mechatronics is the most under-appreciated, under valued of all the engineering sciences. I had a part-time dental assistant about 25 years ago, who was studying mechatronics in the polytechnic. She was absolutely clueless about the job prospects for a mechatronics engineer. I asked her about her aspirations and she replied that she really wanted to work in the games industry.  In our dental profession, equipment have evolved from simple mechanical to electro-mechanical to logic-driven electro-mechanical and currently to computer driven machines.  The medical equipment suppliers who employ mechanical engineers and/or mechanical engineers cannot cope with the repairs of the newer equipment. And many times end up changing whole modules and whole machines just because they cannot repair them. But I think HR is afraid to employ a mechatronics engineer just because they don't know what a mechatronics engineer does. Mechatronics is much more fun. It combines almost all of the engineering sciences and produces an all-rounded engineer. But until HR changes their mindset, not all door will be open.
    • Welcome Tarheel, there is a lot of help on this forum...
    • Hello and welcome to the forum.    Enjoy
    • Hello and welcome from Leeds, England. 
    • I can't find anything similar either.  All the writing on the case was a form of advertising, stem set, Swiss lever etc usually found on older watches.
×
×
  • Create New...