Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

Ariste Racine started his watch production in 1913 in the Jura mountains north of Geneva. The name "Racine" had already been copyrighted, so Ariste reversed his surname and registered the trademark as "Enicar". The firm produced watches up until 1988. There were massive sales to the Middle and Far East, and you have to watch out for repaints, fakes, etc. This is a nice clean one from the 1960s, with an AR 1010 movement in it.

 

Enicar%201.jpg

 

Enicar%202.jpg

Edited by WillFly
Posted

Another fine watch in remarkable condition with a high quality movement,  well worth keeping and preserving,  I notice it has got Incabloc shock protection.  Incabloc in it's self is fascinating in the way it works and how they ever manufacture such tiny, tiny jewels and settings is a mystery to me.

 

RogerC

Posted

Horrible feeling not being able to sign your own work with your own name, still a great idea doing it in reverse another beautifully preserved example Will.

 

How may watches do you have in your collection?

Posted (edited)

At the moment I have:

 

15 American mechanical hand-wound pocket watches, of which 11 are Railroad Grade and the rest 3 are US military with a 4th UK military with an American (Elgin) movement.

 

15 mechanical hand-wound wristwatches: 4 Roamer, 3 Hamiltons (1 with a Swiss ETA 6497 movement), 3 Wittnauer, 1 Enicar, 1 Elgin, 1 Paul Jobin, 1 Longines, 1 Smiths. All pre-1970 with the exception of the Swiss Hamilton.

 

2 modern quartz watches: 1 Certina DS Podium chronograph and a Seiko Solar.

Edited by WillFly
  • Like 1
  • 2 years later...
Posted

Hello, everyone,

I have a 'Swiss Emperor' chronograph (Valjoux 72 movement) which needs to be serviced.

I have emailed Mark twice about this, but have had no replies.

Can anyone recommend a reliable place to get the necessary work carried out?

I'm in the Harlow, Essex, area; but posting wouldn't be a problem.

Thanks.

Len.

 

 

 

 

image.jpeg

Posted

You could get in touch with the B H I tell them what you have and where you live, they will then be able to tell you of a suitable watch-repairer/maker who can undertake such a repair. Just go to their web site. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Hi Len

I'd be more than happy to carry out the service for you. I have serviced this movement numerous times. Please PM me if you want further information.

Best wishes Peter

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted

Hi Folks:

Can anyone recommend a watch repair shop which can reassemble a balance with stud, balance wheel, regulator, stud support and lower and upper indexes for an ETA 6497-1?  The local jewlers I've asked in my area don't want to touch it.  Phone number would be welcomed.  

Thanks,

Timezone (Central NJ)

Posted

Hi:  Thanks for the encouragement but I don't have the level of expertise required for such a delicate repair.  The hairspring has to be reattached and I assume the balance has to be calibrated which would involve test equipment which I don't have. It was my inexperience that broke it in the first place.  Thanks for your reply.

Timezone

Posted

As far as I know ETA does not make a complete balance.  I asked Frei and Esslinger and both said the same.  I've attached a pic of the parts and new balance wheel still in it's sealed package. The bridge is a little blurry. I purchased the balance wheel from Esslinger.

Timezone

Balalnce Parts.jpg

Posted

I asked for a professional watch repair person/ company in my post.  If a local professional watch repair man said he couldn't do it I sure as heck am not going to try it.  

Timezone

Posted

This forum is for watch tinkering, like I said. If anyone had known any professional around your place, he would have helped you by now.

Posted

JDM:

Thanks for your response. I am a learner NOT a watchmaker. I will try the AWCI and find someone there.  Again, thanks for your advice.

 

Timezone

 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I'm sure it's the ancien. My measurements: A = 342. The slight bend in the pivot would make much less than a thousandth of a mm difference to this so I don't think 348 is plausible unless there has been significant wear on the pivots. B is hard to measure without first removing the balance wheel. I measured to the other side of the balance wheel as best I could (263) then subtracted the thickness of the wheel (69) to get 194. This could easily be three or four hundredths out, so 195 looks right. (196 could also be right.) J couldn't be measured. I did my best to measure where the balance wheel has been riveted on and got about 95, so 85 before riveting is plausible. (60 is not.) G again couldn't be measured without first removing the roller. I get 37 where the staff emerges from the roller so 41 at the other end of the taper seems plausible. (43 is also plausible to me.) K = 60. (Definitely larger than 55.)   I've never replaced a balance staff; it'll be a new adventure for me. I'll have to read up on how to maximise my chance of removing the old one without damaging the balance wheel without having access to a lathe. I also need to explore how to remove the roller without damaging it. I won't actually place an order until I've gone through the rest of the movement. With the number of issues I've already found, I'll be amazed if I don't have more surprises in store. There are some watch part suppliers in Australia but nothing like Cousins or Otto Frei or Jules Borel. AllTimeCo is fine for basic parts for modern watches: batteries, bands, some crowns, stems, seals, movements, some tools, etc., but not really anything for vintage watches. Australian Jewellers Supplies is similar. Cousins charges about £9 for shipping to Australia which is about AU$19 and not too bad (considering Australian parcel post is $11) but I still want to minimise the number of times I'm paying it. I need to explore other options closer to home. There may be something in Singapore or China that would have what I want and ship it faster/more economically.  
    • Hi, I just finished the service of a Rolex 3135. Amplitude is great, 295 degrees horizontal after 2 hours and 280 after 12 hours. Vertical positions are 25 degrees down on those. I am however seeing a rate variation with temperature. I have 0 SPD on wrist, say 38 degrees and +7 SPD at 18 degrees room temperature. That equates to +0.35 SPD which is within spec I believe (+-0.5 SPD/ Deg C max). It just seems more than I would expect from such a high quality movement. To put that in context, I see similar rate variation with temperature for a Seiko 7S26. Just wondering what you guys see. Thanks, Steve.
    • For years I've done it the el-cheapo way (read: cleaning by hand). Bought a 2nd Elma S15(H) ultra-sonic, including proper cleaning-fluids (Elma WF Pro (cleaning) & Elma Suprol Pro (rinse)) and entered a complete different cleaning world. These cleaning fluids are none-water based and not that easy to obtain. Initially I bought these fluids in Germany "SKSONIC" (www.sksonic.de) but last year they stopped shipping international. Perhaps they resumed international shipping? You can always ask them. You could also ask @VWatchie, he lives "next-door". As for the fumes; I use the ultra-sonic in my garage, partly for the fumes, but more for our dog ...... he goes "bananas" when I switch on the ultra-sonic. Oh, next on your list (if you consider watch-repair as a long-time hobby), a Microscope (up to 50x is enough).  Pegwood leaves, observed under the microscope that is, whole tree-trunks behind 🫣 Ultra-sonic, in combination with proper cleaning fluids, takes care of the cleaning.
    • How do I remove the hairspring from an ETA? 2846. Balance  staff pivot is broken and I need to transfer the spring over to a new wheel. But the spring stud is not removable. It seems it almost looks like a snap ring at the top of the balance cock or am I missing something?
×
×
  • Create New...