Jump to content

Weishi washi


gary17

Recommended Posts

Hey

I am trying to make head nor tail about using this weishi machine.

Can some one look at these pics and tell me if this is a good reading or bad.

The movement is a valjoux 22 chronograph from 1937 and keeps great time.

I used this watch because it is such a good time keeper as machine suggests.

ButrIMG_20200630_194136.thumb.jpg.5fbbe0dd0c6bbc306c23a983489dc08a.jpglooking at the readings the watch is in a terrible state.

cheers

gary

IMG_20200630_194149.jpg

IMG_20200630_194158.jpg

IMG_20200630_194158_1.jpg

IMG_20200630_194201.jpg

IMG_20200630_194208.jpg

IMG_20200630_194218.jpg

IMG_20200630_194227.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had an Omega auto (forget the caliber) I bought and wore for a few months before deciding to check under the hood. It was within about 5 seconds/month, amazing timekeeping. Put it on the Witschi before servicing, had about 200 degrees of amplitude and a timing delta in 6 positions of well over 100 seconds. After service it had healthy amplitude, and a delta under 15. Never kept time as well though! Maybe 30 seconds/month (still fantastic, but it was almost "magic" before).

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mayhap it's like nickelsilver is hinting at. It's possible your positional error rates more or less cancel each other out. The numbers aren't great, it probably needs a service, but it may be like Mr. Burns (may be a US reference only accessible to a certain age group...). He has all the diseases known to man, plus three new ones, and they're all keeping each other in check. If they fix one ailment, all the rest will come crashing down and kill him. Poor amplitude, high positional error, rickets, etc., but it all works out.

Edited by spectre6000
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It seems like a "spot the difference" quiz - if those pictures are different positions then it looks pretty consistent (good).. sometimes it can be surprising how different a watch seems to wear vs on the timing machine. The amplitude (is low) and rate (slow) otherwise suggest it would benefit from a service (not so good).

I'm presently wearing a 7 jewel pocket watch which is beyond economic restoration.. having suffered some bad past repairs, shows wavy traces, slightly poor amplitude after swapping to a new and stronger mainspring, and poor positional consistency.. taking it off at night, and wearing during the day, It's gained 1 second over the past 4 days (this is more luck than my skill).

Edited by JGrainger
addition
Link to comment
Share on other sites

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 just poked an inflation calculator, and $5 in 2020 would be about $6 in 2024. Doesn't fit very neatly into any status codes, which stop at 5XX, but that's honestly somewhat arbitrary outside of a clever pun for those that dabble in such things. Back during the pandemic, I would spend a good chunk of idle time in the evenings scanning through hundreds of listings a night, and I would only land 1-2 a week max. I would often go months without finding something suitable. A very small percentage of the watches in the price range are worth pulling the trigger on for my purposes. The number floating through the thread here may be somewhat deceptive.
    • Hi, guys I got there in the end after several attempts using a screwdriver and Rodico, I couldn't wait for the tool to arrive and was getting pretty confident handling the stud screw without it flying away. At first, I was using far too much Rodico, and then realized you only need the smallest amount inside the screw slot. Putting the cock back onto the movement also helped as it gave me more to hold onto while my shaky hand tried to align the screw wobbling away at the end of the screwdriver😁 Anyway, job done and I can move on. Thanks again for all the advice it's really appreciated for a beginner. 
    • I'd be interested in a copy of this book if anyone has one they'd like to sell  
    • You need to know at least the basics. Then the questions that You ask will begin to make sense. From what is seen on the video, the gear train and escapement look fine, but the balance doesn't rotate free. I can suppose that the thin gold colored shim that must stay under the balance cock is not in place.
    • Yes, there are a lot of shapes and all of them are used in different cases. The one in Waltham A11 is one of the most spreaded and is what I have shown in the beginning. Of course, the radius of the final curve will depend on the distance between the hole in the stone and the regulator pins on the cock
×
×
  • Create New...