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By RichardHarris123 · Posted
Hello and welcome from Leeds, England. -
Thanks for the comments, I have used them once or twice for my own Watches with success but I did cut them to size as did not want to have any adhesive wonder onto the movement. Good to have some opinions and as I said my hands are tied a little so have yo go with them at tleast for now.
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By RichardHarris123 · Posted
Hello and welcome from Leeds, England. I don't know the caliber but it's a cheap pin pallet. -
By rjenkinsgb · Posted
One of the downsides of computer aided design - everything is cut down to the bare bones limits that can theoretically take the needed stresses and wear, to allow machines to be sold cheaper. After a few years of mass-production use, every moving part is worn out and the cost to rebuild is near than of a replacement! The older machines are built more on rule of thumb and "brick outhouse" principles and can be maintained just about forever, or at least be upgraded with newer, decent control gear. The electronic were the same; a common 1970s-80s servo drive type, rated around 25-35A, was fused at 160A as standard! Modern ones either trip out or leak smoke if they much exceed the nominal rating for more than fractions of a second.
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