Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I can't thank Marc enough for introducing me to the Picker Upper sold by Cousins. It is the most useful tool I have purchased all year. It was originally recommended for handling balance jewels, and for that it is brilliant.

When it comes to handling watch hands, I'm always a bit concerned about marking them or chipping them, especially if they are new, have old lume or just refinished. The other issue is positioning them carefully during reassembly. This where the Picker Upper excels, it lifts the hand with no effort at all, and makes locating them in the correct position a dawdle.

post-124-0-88932100-1424024080_thumb.jpg

Buy one and give it a try, you won't be disappointed! :)

  • Like 1
Posted

Thank you Geo for the new use of a nice tool. I got the whole set from CousinsUK a few days ago and they rock! Being picking most everything I didn't want scratched with them!

Posted

Excellent suggestion Geo!  I just received one last week from a U.S. crafts supplier.  It is a made in Japan, double-ended unit and the price was very reasonable.

post-38-0-81914400-1424026394_thumb.jpg

I'll have to try it with hand installation.

Cheers!

Posted

Excellent suggestion Geo!  I just received one last week from a U.S. crafts supplier.  It is a made in Japan, double-ended unit and the price was very reasonable.

attachicon.gif102_1120.JPG

I'll have to try it with hand installation.

Cheers!

Which supplier did you get it from?
  • 1 month later...
Posted

Thanks for the tip.

All of the ones I've seen on the bay are single ended.

I would like to to get one with a small bead on one end and a larger one on the other end as you pictured.

  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I'm currently working on a Citizen 4520 movement. This has to be the smallest and weirdest quartz movement I've ever worked on. Firstly, it's small. Really small. Here's a picture of it next to a LR44 battery for comparison.  And unlike conventional quartz movements, the construction of this movement is really weird. The moment I took off the top plate, the rotor and 1st wheel are exposed. The PCB is right on the bottom plate. There are no dial side components and cover plates. Everything goes in from the rear. Not sure if I'm able to fix this watch. The old battery leaked and there are battery juice crystals everywhere. And there is a 1 uA constant leakage current, which will drain the tiny battery in no time. But at least there's still a pulse and the rotor twitches.
    • Afraid this is where it could get down to old school adjustment and observation. There are pallet setting tools..but the calibrated ones aren't cheap. The observation holes in the plate will allow you to see if you have one or both stones hanging up/ not engaging on a tooth, That would ofcourse require you to disassemble, heat/move the jewel in/out as required..by eyesight and experience. It's truly trial and error until you get close enough that you could make small adjustments with the banking pins until they drop to the lock freely. You can use a Potence tool to help hold the rok in place during reassmbly. Here's a pic of one...made with a piece of old 18s mainspring You just fold over a roughly 2 inch piece, then file a slot on the end that engages the pallet fork arbor
    • It least you know what to order. 
    • Haha, tell him you're supposed to fill the pool with water before diving.
    • That could be another sign it's up for some TLC. Perhaps too much, too little, or the wrong type of grease was applied to the barrel walls. Perhaps it occasionally slips too much, which could explain the funny initial timing machine readings. Thanks for the input! On second thought, probably not, as it was doing perfectly 24 hours later... Hmm... Perhaps there is some debris floating inside, getting caught and uncaught between some teeth and pinion leaves!? If there is one thing I’ve truly learned over the years, it’s that you must be extremely meticulous about cleanliness and observant of different types of debris that can end up in the movement, such as dust, skin flakes, clothing fibers, etc.
×
×
  • Create New...