Jump to content

Hour hands in wrong position after battery change


Recommended Posts

Hi,

would appreciate your help please. I've been changing batteries at home for a couple of years using basic tool kit bought on line. So far had been successful. But things went wrong with my wife's watch.

After putting in the new battery and closing the case, it was immediately clear that the hour hand was misaligned. I've got no idea what I did to cause this, but with a little research, I wonder if I may have touched the copper coil.

The watch still keeps time, there are no other issues wrong with it apart from the hour hand. 

Is there a way to reset the hand please?

The videos I've watched suggest removing the hands and putting them back in the right place, but it's not obvious how I'd access the face as the rear opening is smaller than the front.

Any help would be very much appreciated.

I've included photos. 

Many thanks,

Simon

 

IMG_20230829_185246.jpg

IMG_20230829_185139.jpg

IMG_20230829_185113.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

it makes sense but I can't find the cut out anymore. And there's no perceptible join in the case. the case appears to be all one piece.

The cut out appears to be a flat spot imperfection which caught the light

I'm using my case knife to try and feel it but nothing so far and I'm probably starting to scratch the case  

 

IMG_20230831_184302~2.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 weeks later...

thanks for all your advice. It took me a little while to find some time to have a go at removing the bezel. Unfortunately, I failed to find any kind of gap - under magnifying glass, work light, with a sharp marking knife - I just can't detect a gap.

My wife has seen a watch repair shop so that's the next step.

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 How about removing the strap, thats where the cut out is located in some watch cases for aestetic reason, so to cover the cut out with the strap , as it usually gets scratched easy when its removed.

As Richard said, bezel is to  defnately  come off, since the dial is larger than the back plate.

Rgds

On 8/29/2023 at 10:38 PM, Simon2023 said:

 I've got no idea what I did to cause this, 

If you unknowingly loosen screws to the gear bridge, the arbour the hr hand is monunted could have turned.

Edited by Nucejoe
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

    • I've just finished refurbishing a Memostar Alarm with AS 1931 movement (same as 1945 but with date and running at 21600). I was also surprised how many parts are available at Cousins. Like you, I was missing the alarm stem (Cousins stock them) and I needed new crowns. It's a nice simple movement for an alarm, easier to service than a Seiko Bell-Matic. BTW I made a note in my Servicing spreadsheet: "Pull out winding stem before removal".  It may have just been wear on my movement, but I found that the yoke could move out of the clutch if the stem was removed in the normal position (like some ETAs).  You might find this interesting     
    • I picked up this alarm watch at a flea market several months ago and recently decided to investigate.  I am not finished, but well on my way. As you can see, there was significant water damage.  Running these parts through my L&R cleaner was not enough to clean them, so I did manual cleaning with one-dip and cotton swab (the dense pointed kind).  The wig-wag was stubborn--the two gears would not release from the plate.  I soaked it in Kroil overnight and that did the trick. There was some rust on the balance staff, but not actually on the pivots themselves.  Nevertheless, I chucked it a step-chuck on my lathe and burnished the pivots. The watch is running and I have confirmed that the alarm drive train is functioning.  Since I am missing a stem for the alarm, I have not done the final assemble of the alarm components.  Surprisingly, there are lots of parts available for this movement on Cousins.  I will probably get a couple of stems and maybe some other parts that I deem necessary. The watch is running at weak amplitude (about 190) and shows some poising issues.  I will work on that. The last two pictures are after partial reassembly.    
    • Hello and welcome to the forum.    Enjoy
    • Exactly!  It may not really be a joke, but the actual truth.
    • The movement is placed on the base and the centre screw is raised until it contacts and supports the centre pinion, thus stopping the centre pinion from sinking in when the second hand is pressed on.
×
×
  • Create New...