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Just picked up this lot of 4 for nothing this past weekend. The bag had $5 on it and the guy just said you can have it! I also picked up another Gildcraft by Gruen for $5 that I will post another time. The seikos I need to order batteries. The Alita and Lathin both run. I am calling the Lathin Mr. Crabs. I think the case is pretty wild as is.DSCN55662.thumb.JPG.39fa95e725c13fe5a4d6db7271d66b67.JPGDSCN55672.thumb.JPG.103cb20a24146c54aa905b9ae2b802a0.JPGDSCN55682.thumb.JPG.663acbeab524923033b0f14414f42aad.JPGDSCN55692.thumb.JPG.a0d64ed68d45f7a222c064b2ae643507.JPGDSCN55702.thumb.JPG.bfdabc17f4d93bde819f02ff748e6fa3.JPGDSCN55712.thumb.JPG.d9c6595d6f84e459c3e49597721f8c0c.JPGDSCN55732.thumb.JPG.a44e180d660c4e65668b60466f7722da.JPGDSCN55742.thumb.JPG.52915679eafb9e14e662447c9940cd5d.JPGDSCN55762.thumb.JPG.2aa9bfc11a7feba6a83d205837ad2990.JPGDSCN55772.thumb.JPG.3a1575daa0e3fffb98b8db86d4acb32e.JPGDSCN55782.thumb.JPG.e03f0fa9623d1848e6010a6d7948c426.JPG

The pelage on the case back really jumps in 3 d when swirled...

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Think I know why the cool colors, dial and hands are radioactive. Not something you want to leave within 3 feet of your bench for very long. A few hours won't matter but wouldn't want to take an unnecessary chance by storing it close by and spending hours everyday.20231108_1731232.thumb.jpg.6c7d879973de4ee8754de4cd824dfbda.jpg

once moved away levels drop back down to normal background readings on the bench...20231108_1738092.thumb.jpg.fc66b5160ca4a821175c0571af091aef.jpg

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"High level. Closely watch the reading, find out why." 

Why is a radium dialed watch. It isn't going to change its output (at least not in a positive direction). If you were Homer Simpsoning (working as a safety officer in a nuclear power plant for those not hip to American pop culture from the last... holy crap... 34 years!), you should be frantically trying to figure out why the readings spiked. If it's an old wrist watch, I wouldn't be all that concerned. Eat fewer bananas on the days you wear it.

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If we assume that you stared directly at the watch, your whole face might receive around 100cpm., or around 1/5th of the dose the meter is showing. It would probably be less. This means that you would need to stare solidly at it 24hrs a day 7 days per week for around 430 days to increase your cancer risk by 1 in 1,000 - So not a zero risk, but equally not a significant risk, and you do need to stare solidly at the dial for that whole period.In reality, you probably would wear it for once in a blue moon, for a few hours, with the dial facing away from you. Increased cancer risk, probably immeasurably small. Just don't lick the dial or sniff the hands and you will be fine.

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52 minutes ago, AndyHull said:

If we assume that you stared directly at the watch, your whole face might receive around 100cpm., or around 1/5th of the dose the meter is showing. It would probably be less. This means that you would need to stare solidly at it 24hrs a day 7 days per week for around 430 days to increase your cancer risk by 1 in 1,000 - So not a zero risk, but equally not a significant risk, and you do need to stare solidly at the dial for that whole period.In reality, you probably would wear it for once in a blue moon, for a few hours, with the dial facing away from you. Increased cancer risk, probably immeasurably small. Just don't lick the dial or sniff the hands and you will be fine.

I appreciate the math! I have about 10 of these now. I keep then in the back room so not sure the cumulative effecf.

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AsPurchasedCropped-l1600.jpg.f6ea9339b3188802140ee7095ae79a3e.jpgAsPurchasedRearCropped-l1600.jpg.d25ba175f654c48374d1c6be4e8c9b56.jpg

More low cost USSR goodness. Possibly a Bostok 2409A but no movement pictures, so that is just a guess.  It does appear to tick, as there were several pictures of the dial side in the listing and the second hand had moved between pictures.

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Yes, you read that correctly. Two pounds and fifty four pence shipped. I think that is possibly a record for the 404 club.
It should clean up very nicely, and I'll post a few pictures once I have it ready to wear.

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.. and next we have a small collection of junk for a fiver. It appears to include a rather battered Swatch Irony chronograph.

Edited by AndyHull
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I got my first 404 club entry.  Bought it for $4.25 ($10.60 with tax and shipping).  Pretty rough but it runs.  Has a pretty unusual (at least to me) band.  Had to use the super glue trick to get the case back off.  Cannot tell the specific movement, other than it is labeled Lavina Watch Co.  I cannot find much info on DeFrece or Lavina.

 

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Edited by gpraceman
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6 hours ago, gpraceman said:

I got my first 404 club entry.  Bought it for $4.25 ($10.60 with tax and shipping).  Pretty rough but it runs.  Has a pretty unusual (at least to me) band.  Had to use the super glue trick to get the case back off.  Cannot tell the specific movement, other than it is labeled Lavina Watch Co.  I cannot find much info on DeFrece or Lavina.

 

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6 hours ago, gpraceman said:

I got my first 404 club entry.  Bought it for $4.25 ($10.60 with tax and shipping).  Pretty rough but it runs.  Has a pretty unusual (at least to me) band.  Had to use the super glue trick to get the case back off.  Cannot tell the specific movement, other than it is labeled Lavina Watch Co.  I cannot find much info on DeFrece or Lavina.

 

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Maybe one of these 

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  • 2 weeks later...

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I now have three of these USSR era Poljot cal 2614.2H beauties awaiting my attention. I'm pretty sure I have another one in the scrap pile too, so when I get a chance, I'll probably try to blitz the lot and see if I can get bring them all back to their former glory.

Average price, not including shipping, £3.00p each, so if I do have any complete disasters along the way, it wont injure my wallet significantly.

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404s are almost always obscure brands. Those in Europe can find name brand Russians on occasion, but we're pretty much limited to stuff you've never heard of here. That dial says the movement is jeweled. No count means one to meet the minimum definition, so it'll be the balance cap jewel opposite the dial, and may not actually interface with the balance staff. Pin lever. I went through a phase where nearly every 404 I found was one of those.... Baumgartner 866, I think. 

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1 minute ago, RichardHarris123 said:

One crown wheel screw corroded, a bit of surface rust but looking good. 

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These movements are well worth the few quid that they can go for. I know Nicklesilver rates them.  I've got into a bit of a habit of researching for known reliable well made movements, picking up the odd few orphans then searching out an externally good watch that they can donor for. Sounds a bit backward but its actually much more cost effective than post searching for a donor. This way any replacement parts are already sourced. Ok you might be waiting to find a watch you like, but you've only spent a few quid instead of paying good money and then being on a wait if it needs fixing. All you are doing is adding a few quid onto that watch but potentially saving a shed load of time.

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1 hour ago, Neverenoughwatches said:

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Maybe not the best place for such a question...

21 jewels with the last 4 being cap jewels on either side of the escapement, but only the easily visible side of wheels 2 & 3. Does a one sided cap jewel setting provide much benefit? I get that they reduce friction by keeping the pivot on its tip rather than side, but if it can still shift away from the cap jewel since there isn't another to do the same job, is the pivot not then on its side in the jewel in pretty much any position other than DU? I'm sure it's just to get the jewel count up for marketing purposes, but still. My pre-coffee mind wants to know.

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20 minutes ago, spectre6000 said:

Maybe not the best place for such a question...

21 jewels with the last 4 being cap jewels on either side of the escapement, but only the easily visible side of wheels 2 & 3. Does a one sided cap jewel setting provide much benefit? I get that they reduce friction by keeping the pivot on its tip rather than side, but if it can still shift away from the cap jewel since there isn't another to do the same job, is the pivot not then on its side in the jewel in pretty much any position other than DU? I'm sure it's just to get the jewel count up for marketing purposes, but still. My pre-coffee mind wants to know.

Even if there was a cap jewel on the dial side, the pivot will still drop off the cap jewel maker's side when the watch is turned dial down. There still needs to be end shake, the cap is mainly doing its thing when the pivot is resting down on it and then any part vertical position where it still may touch. I guess its assumed that dial up is the most frequent position hence one sided cap  jewel on the MS. That sounds feasible as the watch spends it's night that way up.

2 hours ago, RichardHarris123 said:

Rust in the barrel, the spring is shot by the barrel and arbor are ok. So a decent watch only in need of a spring, crown and crystal. 

The crown and stem missing ?

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    • OK, a little bit more from today's lecture about the main springs. Generally, the spring in the barrel is limited and can't  unwind fully. With the blue line is shown the reserve/torque relation when spring unwinding is limited by the barrel. The green line represents the same when the spring is free to unwind fully And the red line shows the minimum torque that is needed for the movement to keep running. The yelow graph shows how the torque changes (from the blue) when the spring gets weaker (set) after 100 years of work. The purple line represents thinner and longer spring in the same barrel. As You can see, using thinner and longer spring will increase the power reserve. The 'set' spring will have the same reserve as a new one with the same sizes, only the amplitude will be just a little smaller.  Of course, this is true only when the movement othervice is in good health ( the red line is lo enough)
    • As long as you don't grind the stuff up and blow it around, you should be fine. Use a dust mask if in doubt.   The things I'm very careful of are: Radium lume - even the stuff that is visually completely dead and inert is still highly radioactive; it's the fluorescent part that decays, not the radium. A single speck inhaled or ingested can cause cancer, so store parts in zip bags and wear a dust mask & wipe your work area down after handling anything that uses it. A proper geiger counter is a good investment if you plan on working with vintage watches, so you can check for it & take appropriate precautions.   "One dip" & equivalents - the original type & the generic PERC dry cleaning fluid (Tetrachloroethylene / perchloroethylene) which is what the original one dip was mostly made of. That's toxic, a known carcinogen. Use in very good ventilation only & keep it sealed whenever possible.   The newer B-Dip is presumably a safer replacement.  
    • Only 137% !  sounds like you're not putting enough effort in 😆.  I would think of it like cogs on pushbike.  Fastest speed to the spindle would be largest pulley wheel on the drive and smallest pulley wheel on the driven. If the motor was into a sliding bed you would have 3x4 ? Speeds.
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