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By rossjackson01 · Posted
Been there. Worn that Tshirt. I now have loads of watches, in bits. I made the mistake, as many do when starting, of obtaining cheap watches. I will learn to repair them I thought. Should have started my course ealier and learned that if a watch is working, you can do a service. If is is broken, unless you have massive skill, it will still be broken. You need replacement parts. Hey another watch that is broken will do. Not. Hence all the bits. Learn from Mark's course. I can now do full sevices easiy. Everthing except Shellac repair. Deep repair is specialist. -
Or they don't care or are blissfully unaware! Good quality oils and proper oiling techniques are the most critical aspects of a service. Attached is a link where I allow myself to be uninhibitedly vicious! 😆 https://www.watchrepairtalk.com/topic/26353-whats-your-favourite-youtube-watch-repair-channel/page/2/#comment-218905 I even commented one of the videos with: "I really don't mean to be rude, but you're drowning that movement in oil. It's not going to run well or for long. You really need to do something about your oiling skills, or lack thereof."
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Have a question can someone help are there Any tool that can hold the stud well I'm trying fitting the taper pin on a balance?
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By HectorLooi · Posted
Use this type of eyebrow tweezers. The angled jaw type gives better torque than the straight ones. -
Looks like you need what's called a H Blade or maybe just file a slot in a 2mm Screwdriver. https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/hublot-bezel-screw1
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