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Another new member


tman

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Hello.

Another new sign-up here.

I'm an IT bod by trade and I spend most of my spare time restoring vintage cars these days.

In a past lives I've been a draughtsman, electronic technician, TV engineer and worked a while in laser printer development.

My downfall if you will is, if I have a faulty 'something' in my life I have to take it apart to try to fix it, I can't help myself! I'm moderately successful, mostly down to determination and stubbornness rather than any outright skill-set on my part!

I've spent a few weeks of evenings watching Mark's YouTube videos and they inspired me to dip my toe into horology.

Where this will take me I don't know. What I've realised fairly quickly is that for this to be a lasting hobby, I need a microscope - eyeglasses are going to become tedious for me very quickly.

My order of tools from Cousins arrived last week. I compiled my shopping list while watching videos but I have to confess that since this is yet to become an 'official' hobby, I kept it pretty much to budget/no-name brands.

Anyway, that's all from me - I've need to go and write up a post asking for help from you good people!

cheers
andrew

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Thank you for your introduction and welcome to this friendly forum.

A good screwdriver set will make life easier than cheap ones  the same goes for tweezers. 

This set is good to set you off

 Bergeon 30080-P05 screwdrivers

Dumont tweezers No 3 

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    • I used to just remove the stem pop the movement in its case then put the stem back in check everything then back on the timer. 
    • That's the right technique Mal 👍 If you are ok with a loupe ( which I'm not ) then pick up the dial in your left hand and make a tripod holder out of 3 fingers and then exactly how Mal and me described with your right hand, press and flick out the stem at the same time. You need three fingers to do this, i use my ring ring finger , sounds like mal uses his little finger, just whatever you feel comfortable with. The key point and dangerous side to this is the tweezers or driver slipping off the release screw. Stablise your left arm by resting your elbow on your bench, so that you can hold the movement horizontally flat, use a x5 loupe to view  and good light so you can see well and have a good tight fitting screwdriver to push the release down. Or as suggested a pusher mounted solid upside-down somewhere then all you need to do is push your movement up to it. I'll rig something up in a bit to show you what i mean. Something like this, but tbh its better to just learn to do with your fingers.
    • Thanks Michael, shes a real soldier, it would take a tank to knock her off her feet.  Shes surprised even me and i knew she was a tough cookie.  Good for you Michael, you keep at it. I've been reading your posts re. your watchroom they're inspiring and it doesn't matter how long it takes you to get there its about the journey. Rome wasn't built in a day, our watchcaves are our solitudes, our own little empires where we can shut ourselves away from the crap that goes on around us in the world. I look forward to seeing you progress, I have my own ideas how i like to do things. But in answer to your questions on that thread, just let your workspace evolve around you and how you work. You wont figure it out straight away but you will know when to change it and when to leave it alone. But most of all just enjoy it.
    • That can be tricky. Sometimes I hold the movement from the edges in left hand and with right hand I push the release with tweezers and simultaneously pull the stem out with right hand pinky or something. 
    • I see what you mean. I must admit I’m not entirely comfortable with that but I can’t see a better method than what you suggest. I’d like to see something like this mirror with a short spike: https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/mirror-for-observing-movements Place it on, push the spike on the post with one hand and release the stem with the other hand. Minor problem, it doesn’t exist.
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