Jump to content

Using just a video recording to calculate the daily rate of the watch?


Recommended Posts

I had this idea after @watchweasol suggested Watch-O-Scope to me, why not just record a watch close up with a phone, and then use the beats data, over, let's say 1 minute to calculate the daily error rate?

This is coming from a complete watch noob, so there's likely a reason it won't work, since it's not been done before, no such basic app on the App Store as far as I can see

But I recorded my 28800 beat watch in a room with AC running, and from the sound graph, you can clearly see 8 perfect beats every second

751847930_ScreenShot2020-06-11at17_58_28.thumb.png.8e30c604cdbe278e512f99a961a4f0c7.png

I guess the next step for me is to run it for 1 minute, and reach +6s/d - which is my watch's deviation

Before I count all those beats manually, just wanted to consult the community, how exactly does a time grapher work, why does it need a degree as an input etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use "watch tuner lite" on the iPhone which is free and probably uses the same principle, but just gives the rate in figures, 

The full version is around £12 IIRC with a timegrapher type display, but I haven't felt I've needed it yet.  

2020-06-11 17.35.46.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can't explain in detail how a timegrapher works, but I guess with the "degree as an input" you mean the lift angle. It is the angle in which the impulse pin of the balance interacts with the crown of the pallet fork. This angle is needed to correctly calculate the amplitude of your watch.

This is the formula:

(3600 x lift angle) : (time between the first and the third noise in secondsπ x beats per hour

Here you can find a list with movements and their lift angles:

https://www.lepsi.ch/lift-angle/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For android users the is the app Clock Tuner. It only cost $4.99. Absolutely worth every penny. I can get a rough idea of trouble in seconds, anywhere I am. unfortunately it isn't capable of displaying the amplitude and you can't adjust the lift angle, but everything else is there.

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.athumbsoft.pendulumtuner&hl=en_US

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 weeks later...

Thanks for the replies, sorry I was away as I was replacing my computer

Thanks for the last pdf too, just by glancing on it a bit, it indeed demonstrates all the basics

I guess I was searching the wrong terms, I ended up buying the "Watch Tuner" for $10+ - the Lite version is $4+ - thought I might as well go for the full version - but honestly, it was quite disappointing

It simply doesn't work, tested it on a fresh eta 2804.2 which gains 6s/d - used the built-in microphones, used in earphone microphones, it keeps on reading -10s/d - tested it on a king seiko that gains 10s/d-ish - again, it reads negative values for that one too - tested different positions and everything, always negative values

Am I doing something wrong, or is it just a bad app?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, kaan said:

Am I doing something wrong, or is it just a bad app?

You should get a timegrapher or equivalent app with an external microphone to diagnose and regulate mechanical watches. Have a read of the many existing topics on the subject.

Link to comment
Share on other sites



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • yes I noticed the new site and I miss the old site. It's the unfortunate problem of the Internet here today gone tomorrow sometimes some of the stuff gets backed up and sometimes well it does not then the problem with the early Seiko's were there were not necessarily designed for distribution across the planet and as such there is no customer support for them. So trying to find early stuff like technical information or sometimes even parts list for older Seiko is is problematic. But I did find you a you tube video. A quick look he seems to take a heck of a lot of time to actually get to the service single I did not watch all that but it does look like he did disassemble or started to say there's a tiny bit here  
    • RichardHarris123: Hello and welcome from Leeds, England.  I have family all over Australia, went as £10 poms Thanks Richard. Hope you’re able to visit your family here and that they’ve all done well 🙂 My relatives arrived from England in the 1790s transported on the ‘Second & Third Fleets’—a story of timber sailing ships, of convicts and doing well in this huge Country of Australia. When I visited the UK in the 1980s, I was too young to comprehend the depth and breadth of its history…  Best wishes, Mike William Chapman, my 4th great Grandad’s charges, at age 23 read at the Old Bailey; sentenced to 7 years of transportation to Sydney.
    • The whole process and the progress are closely observed, it's hand-driven and very controlled. I can't see the "danger", unless you are watching the TV while doing it. As you could have read, and in this quote "wheel" is the balance-wheel.
    • Have you got the pallet fork installed in the movement when you see the train move when using the setting works? As nevenbekriev said, without the pallet fork to lock the train, the behaviour you are describing is normal. If this is happening with the pallet fork installed, you have a problem in the gear train, it should be immobile when the pallet fork is locking the escape wheel.  The fit of the circlip above the pinions on that wheel is crooked in your pictures, it should sit flat up against the upper pinion as in Marc’s picture.  Hope that helps, Mark
    • Hi I got a Jaeger LeCoultre K911 movement, where one of the stems was broken. Part no. Should be 401.  Im based in Europe and tried Cousins but its discontinued. They except to get stem in stock for cal. K916 but will that work? Or Is there a way out to join the ends?
×
×
  • Create New...