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Posted

I'm a long time watch lover who, after receiving yet another large bill for a watch service, decided to look into doing it myself... and here I am, all the way down the rabbit hole with my own watch station in my garden workshop, a parts bin full of micro-controllers and IoT equipment (my previous hobby) and an hour wheel on the way from Ebay after discovering my 4697 doesn't get sold with one...   Still... my NH35 will be here soon enough and my journey will begin properly! 🙂  looking forward to learning all I can !

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Posted

It could have been the $600 service charge for my recently serviced IWC that prompted me as I wasn't anxious to spend that much again on the Zenith. Thought maybe I'd tackle the Zenith myself. I still have a long way to go before I'd feel safe undertaking the Zenith.

Welcome to the forum!

When you have some interesting things to show us please don't hesitate.

- Gary

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Posted
8 hours ago, Meremortal said:

micro-controllers and IoT equipment

Any Silicon Labs micros?

Welcome to the forum.  You will find electronic enthusiasts here as well...useful for the quartz realm.

Posted
On 7/1/2022 at 8:25 PM, LittleWatchShop said:

Any Silicon Labs micros?

Welcome to the forum.  You will find electronic enthusiasts here as well...useful for the quartz realm.

Hey, unfortunately no.  I've got a bunch of ESP32's and 8266's though 🙂

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    • Welcome to the forum, enjoy. 
    • Yes, the specific old tools do exist, but may be having one is not needed as they are not cheap, and also You will be able to do without it well enough. My advice will be to use regular depthing tool and adjust it for the exact distance between pallet fork and escape wheel bearings from the watch. Then remove the shellac from the pallet that now doesn't pass the ew teeth and move this pallet in. Then put the pallet fork and ew on the depthing tool and check how they lock. They should not lock when the pallet is in, but You will little by little move the pallet out and locking will appear. Then move just an idea out for reliable work and apply shellac, then check if things are still the same. You have to observe where the teeth fall on the pallets - it must be just a little below the edge between impulse and rest planes. Then You must check how everything behaves in the movement This Potence tool is so ingenious, but actually, the traditional way to do the things is much more simple. Arrange the parts not on the pillar plate, but on the cover plate. Only the central wheel will remain on the pillar plate, secured by the cannon pinion.
    • There is a tool that was made for setting up and adjusting escapements of full plate watches.  There were two styles, the picture below shows both of them.  The lower tool held a movement plate and the vertical pointed rods were adjusted to hold the unsupported pivots of the lever and escape wheel.  There was also a version of this tool that had 3 adjustable safety centres so that the balance pivot could be supported by the tool :  The other version I’m aware of is the Boynton’s Escapement Matching and Examining Tool came as a set of two or three clamps that gripped the watch plate and held the safety centres for the pivots : These do turn up on eBay from time to time.  For some escapement work, you can set up the parts in a regular depthing tool, with the centres set according to the distance between the corresponding pivot holes on the movement.  I hope this helps, Mark
    • Once you are aware of the problem, you can adjust as necessary. I have a couple of the Omega 10xx, and they are not my favourites. They seem a bit flimsy and not as solid as previous generation Omega. But I think that's true of a lot of movements from the 70-80s. For me, the 50-60s is the peak in watch movements, where the design criteria was quality, not saving the last penny.
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