Jump to content

Quartz movement run slow


Recommended Posts

14 minutes ago, Nucejoe said:

@rodabod  Aprox 2 minutes/ hr slow.

 

I'd watch the seconds hand for a few minutes and see if you observe it ever stuttering.

Of course, the easy option is if you have a quartz measurement tool, but most of us don't own one.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

There is always the possibility of a faulty Block  but they either work or dont work,  Unless you have an analyser or some method of testing the module ie current consumption its difficult, High consumption is usually a dirty mech drawing more current to over come the dirt.

2 min per day is indicative of a sluggish train,  Whats the calibre number

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you watchweasol, I am not yet sure if I should crack the back open. must have a quartz eta inside. Will ask you for datasheet if it gets to clean and lube. 

The watch is a friend's who didn't know, I am quartz ignorant.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Nucejoe  A quartz watch is no different than a mechanical one  apart from the fact the Battery provides the voltage/current the block interprets this, The crystal vibrates around 32,768 times a second the block divides this down to normaly one pulse a second which is output to the coil which causes the step motor to pulse once, this turns the gear train and then the hands.  Some watches pulse once every 4 secs  or 6 secs depending on the make.  As the current drawn is in micro amps it doesnt take much to affect the module ie dirt and old oil or even the wrong oil should be  9024 and 9027.  The attachment explains both the mechanical and the quartz.      regards

Witschi Training Course.pdf

  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, watchweasol said:

Hi Nucejoe  A quartz watch is no different than a mechanical one  apart from the fact the Battery provides the voltage/current the block interprets this, The crystal vibrates around 32,768 times a second the block divides this down to normaly one pulse a second which is output to the coil which causes the step motor to pulse once, this turns the gear train and then the hands.  Some watches pulse once every 4 secs  or 6 secs depending on the make.  As the current drawn is in micro amps it doesnt take much to affect the module ie dirt and old oil or even the wrong oil should be  9024 and 9027.  The attachment explains both the mechanical and the quartz.      regards

Witschi Training Course.pdf 4.65 MB · 0 downloads

Thank you WW,  the minute hand completes each forward move by one second on dial markings with each pulse. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Nucejoe said:

Thank you WW,  the minute hand completes each forward move by one second on dial markings with each pulse. 

But, it's dropping seconds somewhere.... When I say "stuttering", what I basically mean is, is the motion irregular in any way?

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi    when the block is calculating the pulses it uses a thing called inhibition and if the checksum is not right it either adds or drops a pulse to automaticaly correct the calculated error ,  so there is the remote possibility the block circuit is faulty in its calculations. But these circuits either work or dont work they are that reliable but one should not discount the possibility.  If it were me I would clean and oil the movement and re run any tests using the analyser, Not having an analyser use a analogue meter and watch the coil pulses for a regular beat or just run the watch and observe the timing.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Unfortunately I'm not that lucky. I started on the train side and after I noticed the binding I pulled everything out except the driving wheel to rule everything else out. It still binds. I'm going to double check that the pinion is fully seated on the staff first, then if no joy I'll push the bridge jewel up a fraction of a mm. Fingers crossed!
    • Happy to have helped, great way to start the day with a win! 🥳
    • Thank you for the advise!! It worked. The setting screw was a lock/unlock to remove the rotor. 
    • I have that French tech sheet too, it is a little different than the English one (eg, it doesn't have the auto works diagram). BTW, it looks like you are looking up the case number in the 1979 ABC supplement. The 1974 ABC catalog does have the 3093 case. As you determined it takes the 1222-5 crystal.  When I serviced my President 'A' (which also takes that crystal), I was able to fit a 29.8 crystal from my DPA crystal assortment. Those are, in my opinion, a great deal. The assortment comes with 10 sizes each from 27.8mm to 32.4mm in 0.2 increments. I pretty much use them for any non-armored crystal that takes a high dome crystal. I think they no longer make them but Cousins has still has some in stock but when I bought them they were around $40 for the set and now they are around $100. Still, at 40 cents a crystal it's still a good deal. For the large driving wheel, I remember I once assembled the keyless/motion works first and when I placed the large driving wheel it was interfering with the setting wheel on the dial side as the teeth were not fully meshing and it wouldn't fully seat. If that isn't the issue I got nothing and am looking forward to see how you solve it 🙂
    • Not sure, but just looking at it, it seems like the screw on the right may be a fake? The one on the left may not be a screw in the regular sense at all, rather a 2 position device, I think you need to point the slot towards either of the 2 dots and one will secure and one will open. Like I said this is just my best guess looking at the pictures.
×
×
  • Create New...