Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hello World of Watchrepairtalk,

I'm new to watches and old in the same time from the perspective of a user. I always loved watches since I was 6 years old, I always enjoyed the idea of tracking the time and know where I'm in the day. I loved and like all of them: quartz as my old Montana with multiple melodies, the old Atlantic that my father used to wear, or my first triad Luch , Raketa and Pobeda, Eastern European watches from Soviet Union and so on. I remember breaking a lot of them, I remember the mechanical watches used to be so sensitive, or maybe it was just me the one that didn't took enough care when either I tried to dismantle or wearing them. After my first love with mechanical watches, I started using mainly quartz watches for a long period of TIME. My last seven years during the new revolution with the smartwatches I started wearing a lot of them, probably dozens, when suddenly one fake face dial on my smartwatch flickered something in my memory... Why should I wear a fake watch analog dial when I can have the original...!!?? And now here I'm.. Right now I'm back to the beginning. But this time is here to stay with me until the end. I want to regulate and fix my own watches, I want to know everything I can learn about this wonderful world of mechanical watches and horology. I don't want to be a watchmaker because I think is too late for me, I'm just a watch user that wants to go a step further into this wonderful world of watches. I mean the real watches.

Thank you Mark for your courses and thank you to all watch lovers for sharing your knowledge with us within this forum.

Johnny from the deep,

PS: I apologies for my english but is not my first language.

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

    • Hello and welcome from Leeds, England. 
    • I agree with hector it's probably the regulator curve, it almost always is on these movements. So i work on these movements a lot and iv'e managed to fairly consistently get them running at like 50 degrees more amplitude than that with deltas in the 3 range and on the wrist deviations of sub 1 second a day. They ALWAYS require work to get there though. The main thing is shaping the regulator curve and this is really finnicky and definitely something you practice on a movement you don't care about when you're new (I'm still new) but if the hairspring is flat and the coils are evenly spaced and the regulator curve is properly shaped and it's pretty wild how accurate these movements can get.  But, it does sound like your regulator curve maybe needs a bit of reshaping. You can easily mess up the watch learning to do this so warning if you don't want to live with your current results but I"m not an expert, it's just speculation but there's a pretty easy way to check.  This is a good video showing how to see if your terminal curve is properly shaped. Just make sure the regulator pins are open when you test this.   He takes off the balance wheel to shape it. I do it with the movement disassembled but the balance on the mainplate. I use a homemade tool from a sharpened dental pic to do the adjustments (Tiny tiny TINY adjustments) and i use the regulator pins themselves to sorta brace the spring against to bend it very tiny amounts and just keep checking it by moving the regulator arm down it till it stops moving the hairspring. Taking off the balance wheel over and over again is a good way to slip and destroy your hairspring and will make the process way slower. I try to avoid removing the balance wheel from the cock it on these movements due to how difficult it is to get the hairspring stud back into the balance cock. It's super easy to slip and twist your spring then you got way worse problems.  Since these are mass manufactured and unadjusted the regulator curve is NEVER perfect but once you learn how to reshape them it's pretty easy to do and you can get REALLY low deltas with really low positional error and pretty remarkable accuracy.  Definitely with it powered down and the balance on the movement with both balance jewels in place look across the spring to see if it's perfectly flat, then check the regulator curve how he does it in the video. I would bet money even if it's not your main issue the regulator curve is not ideal also. 
    • Thanks. Damn, first breakage. This picture of the movement is from the sale listing.  
    • Hello all, New member here, hoping  to gain knowledge about something that has been of interest for years.  Cheers!
    • So the stem is snapped and will need replacing but luckily there's enough left in the crown to unscrew without a problem. Will need to see photos of the movement to identify it.
×
×
  • Create New...