PostwarO27 Posted November 12, 2021 Share Posted November 12, 2021 Hi out there. I'm George and I joined the forum a month back but never got around to posting here in the intro section. I got into the hobby just a few years ago when my wife asked me it I could replace a battery in her mothers watch which she took possession of after her mom passed. Turns out it wasn't quartz watch but a manual wind that in the end only needed a new mainspring and a good cleaning. Being a toolmaker by trade and used to working to extreme details and tight tolerances as small as .0001 of an inch, I figured I'd take a crack at it. Between what I had inherited from my father and he from my grandfather I managed to cobble together some screwdrivers and tweezers to access the watch and take it apart. Iv managed to put together some vintage tools from ebay and purchased a good set of drivers, tweezers and needed lubes. I'v amassed dozens of movements and thousands of spare parts and its full speed ahead at every spare moment I get. I look forward to extracting as much info as I can from yall and hope I can reciprocate as well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oldhippy Posted November 12, 2021 Share Posted November 12, 2021 Thank you for your introduction and welcome to this friendly forum. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nucejoe Posted November 12, 2021 Share Posted November 12, 2021 Welcome to WRT forum. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
watchweasol Posted November 12, 2021 Share Posted November 12, 2021 Hello George and welcome to the forum Attached is a handy document for you. enjoy cheers TZIllustratedGlossary.pdf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KarlvonKoln Posted November 13, 2021 Share Posted November 13, 2021 Willkommen! It is always good to have more people acquainted with tool and die work. And if you are used to tolerances of .0001 of an inch, then you will have little difficulty with watches, although you will see millimeters much more often than inches. And you will find that many of our store-bought tools follow the same pattern you see everywhere else: there are cheap tools from China or Taiwan or nearby to there which are fragile and hard to use and terrible overall, there are better tools which some of us can afford, and there are excellent tools some of which are Swiss and very expensive and some of which are vintage and could also be very expensive. If you know tools, you know all this, and nothing will surprise you about it. I work on antique watches a lot, so I have been gathering mostly vintage tools when I can afford to. Enjoy your work on timepieces! Ask us questions! Poke around in the forum; use the search function! There is much to see: manuals, links to tech sheets, the Best-Fit stuff, you name it! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael1962 Posted December 6, 2021 Share Posted December 6, 2021 Welcome to the forum George. @PostwarO27 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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