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I have a few questions on the use of a (lever-type) jeweling tool in the adjustment of jewel endshakes, as I have never done this before. 1. If the endshake is too much or too little, how do you choose where to adjust the endshake? Do you adjust the endshake on the train bridge, or the main plate, or both? How do you decide which is the best? 2. When inserting the pusher into the spindle of a lever-type jeweling tool, such as a Favourite, is the best practice to take out the entire spindle from the tool frame to insert the pusher? And likewise, take out the entire spindle from the tool frame to remove the pusher? Or is it perfectly ok to insert or remove the pusher when the spindle is still inside the jeweling tool frame. Which way is safer/ best practice. 3. Is there an attachment to the base of the jeweling tool to hold the mainplate or bridges? I don’t seem to see any for sale, new or otherwise. Can I make one?
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In the USA, you could try: https://www.jewelerssupplies.com/ or http://www.julesborel.com/ Cousins in the UK might be a possibility (although Waltham is a US watch, I'm sure some of them made it across the pond). https://www.cousinsuk.com/ Mark also has a list here: https://www.watchfix.com/category/watch-parts-tools-suppliers/watch-parts-tools-suppliers-us/
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By HectorLooi · Posted
Yup. It's like the song from The Greatest Showman.... Never Enough! Never, never... -
Somewhere else the group we we had a discussion on finding lift angle which is similar to this. I've found that using a certain type of highlighting pen with liquid ink worked much better than any other color because it would fluoresce under UV light. So you just dim the lights down and it glows really brightly and it makes it really easy to see the amplitude. There's another way to do it but unfortunately it's astronomically expensive and no I don't know how expensive it is but I think of we would have to ask it's beyond our price range I do wonder if we will for a clever whether we could do something similar? In any case they put a Mark on the balance arm the use a camera system to film it and then they can measure the actual physical amplitude and they can also determine the left ankle. Thishttps://www.witschi.com/en/products/wisioscope-2/ The experience with This Group Has Been They Usually Don't Work the Best. And Then There Is the Other Minor Little Thing Whether You Have a Timing Machine or an App You Going to Have To Figure out How Many Beats per Hour This Is? Because the Age It May or May Not Be 18,000 Fortunately the Timing Machines Usually Have All the Standard Frequencies That It Probably Is and You'll Just Have To Figure out Which One It Is.
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I bought the balance staff removal tool first then realized I needed the staking set. lol. Buying more tools never seems to be a problem. Matt
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UhrTobi
Hello,
I'm new here since a views hours and there is already my first problem I'm not able to solve. I did my first practice on a Seiko 7S26C movement. It is from a watch of a verry good friend. He was verry unsatisfied with its performance and told me, that the watch goes some times to fast, other times to slow. A timegrapher analytics shows this, too. In the same orientation the watch fluctuates between ca. +25s/day and -30s/day within a view minutes without any disturbance from outside. It had got a verry low amplitude of about 156°. He gave it to me just to practice. But now I have a strong motivation to fix the problem. I dissassembled it following Marks verry helpfull videos on youtube, cleaned and lubricated it and put it together two times. It still works nevertheless
. And the amplitude is now sometimes over 200° but suddenly it goes back to 180°. I could regulated the beat error down to ca. 0.1ms and it goes to max. 0.6ms depending on orientation. But the amplitude is still not stable and the accuracy is still fluctuating. The hair spring looks good ans all bearings seems to be clean. And so I can't guess, what the problem is. I would be verry glad if someone could give me some assotiations how I could fix the problem.
Many thanks an best regards
Tobi
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TimpanogosSlim
It was not my intention to imply that you were wasting peoples time. I was trying to participate in the diagnosis, nothing more. Mainspring lubrication appears to be one of the complicated and p
JohnR725
Lubrication is a problem in watch repair because watch repair has spanned a very long time. The technical sheets the books the bulletins whatever people look at have spanned a long time. People embrac
Nucejoe
If you find a patern in fluctuations, you have spotted where the fault is likely to be.
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