Jump to content

Pocket watch movement removal mystery


Recommended Posts

Hi all,

I am just getting into watch repair as a hobby so please bear with me…

I bought this nice DF&C pocket watch on eBay as a first practice. It was already running OK and I recall reading some advice which said to try disassembling a working watch to see if you could reassemble it and still have it work as a test!

Anyway, unfortunately I can’t for the life of me figure out how to remove the stem so that I can remove the movement. I already have some experience of this with modding Seikos and removing the movement from a couple of other pocket watches. There is no little screw nor lever to release the stem. The front of the pocket watch can’t open, only the back. Maybe it is a two piece stem? From what I can see the stem beyond the movement is a little corroded which could maybe make it a bit stiff? I’ve done a lot of Googling and also removed the case screws + part disassembled the movement inside the case to see if anything obvious would present itself but nope. I didn’t want to force anything either in case I broke something.

Any help much appreciated, thank you!!

Here are pictures with the movement in place (just crown and ratchet wheel off) and also one with all the bridges removed to reveal some of the keyless works. Please let me know if any other pictures would be helpful. Thank you!

72684CB4-ED02-428D-919E-36FB9F545F5B.jpeg

847880A3-8D86-4516-9BFC-C314D18B4E4A.jpeg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, ivanUK said:

pocket watch on eBay as a first practice.

while it's true we recommend starting with something bigger the problem with pocket watches are is a lot of variations of how things work including how to take the watch of the case.

how about we pretend this is an American pocket watch? I don't have the best picture it's a little bit confusing. In pocket watches a lot of them if there is no screw to release the stem the stem probably stays in the case. So the stem that's in the case the square part goes into what I have in the image below there's a square opening at the end.

so on American pocket watches and a lot a European watches you would remove the case screws removed the front of the case make sure the watches in setting position and then just push the movement out starting at the opposite side of where the stem goes in and the movement should just come out.

 

pocket watch no stem.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

Hello! Thank you so much for this help and apologies for not responding sooner. Personal circumstances prevented me from re-engaging with the hobby for a while. But good news: it took me a while to convince myself that the front of the pocket watch could be prised off, but I managed in the end and this method worked a charm! I look forward to working on the movement properly now 🙂 many thanks again

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Thank you everybody for the replies and advices
    • Yesterday evening I was trolling the net ( as we all do)  when I stumbled on this vid. Last month there was a debate on are Chinese tools worth purchasing and I gave my thoughts that being the biggest differences is the materials used to make them and also they are not built to the Swiss fine tolerances. The tool he shows to compare with the Seitz jeweling tool I am sure is Chinese and shows the point I was tring to make.    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CIqQcVLgtB0
    • Good afternoon. More than once I've damaged balance staffs because  tight steady pins necessitating force to get the balance cock in place. I assume the steady pins get slightly deformed over the years by over enthusiastic balance cock removal. So now I take the lesser evil of using a smoothing broach on the steady pin holes so I get the feel and control back when fitting the cock. Is this the best option or am I missing a trick? Thanks all. 
    • I dont have any personal friends who are watch nerds so I have to share my joy with y'all 🙂  If you saw my other thread I had bought a Elgin Sportsman to start learning on after getting fairly proficient with my practice movement. I ended up stripping out some threads in the main plate and abandoning that project. I was able to clean it and get it running again so I learned a ton.  Next up, a Gruen Precision that I got off ebay. This project took forever and after realizing the balance was no good and buying a donor movement I was able to get it back in working order. I dont have a time grapher yet but I've been wearing it for 2 days and its keeping pretty dang good time!  - Disassembled, cleaned and reassembled / lubed the entire movement.  - Pressed in a new crystal - Replaced the strap - Replaced the crown (the old crown was just destroyed) One thing that really killed me was that I scratched the dial with my hand levers. I was just rushing because I was frustrated (had to take the hands off a few extra times because they weren't flat) lesson learned.    Next up is a Seiko that I also got on ebay. This will be my first automatic, and my first date complication. Super excited and so glad I found this hobby!   
    • Well I actually looked more into it and I think the answer is the following: ST36/3600 is not a clone of ETA6497 it is a clone of OP XI which is a derivation of the ETA. And when you look at both they are actually complete clones (the beat, the bridge shapes even the decoration).  
×
×
  • Create New...