Anyone actually using acetone for cleaning? (excluding shellacked parts)
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By Neverenoughwatches · Posted
This will give you time to figure out where you want things, should also give you a feel for the height that suits you. I'm jealous, i wanted to start my new watchroom but it might be put on hold for now. -
Hi all of you, I've just received a pocket watch without any brand name wich looks quite old, and the only information I could see on the movement is 7020. I haven't disassembled it yet, and I must admit I am a bit reluctant to do it as it seems old (but it works well). Could anyone help me? Here are some photos.
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@Michael1962 the advantage you have this way Michael is you can try things out and plan better how you want it to be long term. I was thinking as well you need to consider storage, maybe tools at the workbench, a metal cabinet at the cleaning station for chemicals, tools and materials at the polishing/machining bench and spare parts at the test station. Tom
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By Neverenoughwatches · Posted
Can you turn the cock over,looks like the stud fits into that cut out -
By Neverenoughwatches · Posted
I usually just give everything a good brush down first to remove debris, i like to do any repairs first it saves a lot of time having to re-clean . Not sure about a practice piece maybe? it has so many what look like old poor repairs. Up to now, broken setting lever, set mainspring, two cracked plate jewels, chipped pallet fork cock jewel, chipped pallet stones, rusty hairspring, heavily modified balance wheel,and deformed staff. The jewels are rubbed in and the staff just snapped taking the roller off.
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