Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I’ve been working on some vintage Swiss alarm clocks and desk timepieces with 15 jewel 8 day hand wound movements. These are 50s-60s era Imhof and Looping clocks- robustly built, terrific quality and as cheap as chips- can you even buy things like these now? I remember seeing these nice little clocks disappear in the 80s in favour of cheap quartz examples. 

When I service these I try to put in a new mainspring where possible (Cousins sell some of the Imhof ones for less than £3) but even then, I find the timekeeping can be a little variable- sometimes gaining to begin with, and then losing time towards the end of the wind. I guess this is the effect the fusee and chain was designed to counter, but I am trying to figure out how best to regulate it. 

My first thought was to let it run for four days, and then regulate as finely as possible at that point- hoping that the gain in the first four days would be countered with the loss afterwards. This assumes that the loss of torque from the spring is perfectly linear over the 8 days, and even if it works, the clock will only be working exactly to time at one point in the cycle. 

Is there a technique to all this or must I simply correct the time every couple of days? 
 

Thanks,

Bill
 

 

Posted

How are you cleaning the movements. What oils are you using. £3 for a new mainspring that is cheap I'm wondering if they are a poor quality. Another good make is Swiza have you repaired them. 

  • Like 1
Posted

I strip them down and clean off accumulated gunk and dust, then peg the pivot holes to remove congealed oil. When I buy these, they have often stopped or run sluggishly due to this.
 

Then I clean the parts in my Elma Super Elite (rinse 1, Elma 1:9 and rinse 2, distilled water). The third rinse is in IPA in a sealed container in an ultrasonic (not the pallets). I use Molycote DX on the barrel arbor pivots and winding/setting works, HP1300 on the centre wheel and third, then 9020 on the fourth, escape and balance wheel pivots. 941 on the pallet stones/ escape wheel teeth. Before the rebuild I demagnetise everything. 

Admittedly the first replacement spring was rubbish and slipped as the bridle isn’t a separate riveted section, just the spring bent back on itself at the end. The second one is doing better. The amplitude is very good in all cases, and the beat error negligible (well below 1). 

I’ve seen Swiza clocks but have never worked on one. I think they are pin pallet? The Looping 811 is my favourite as logically constructed and almost silent in operation. I can never usually get on with mechanical alarm clocks as the ticking is too loud! 

Posted (edited)

Try using Windles clock oil for the mainspring and arbor. A good pocket watch oil on the train and a good watch oil on the escapement, just a touch on the pallet stones and that will work around the escape wheel teeth.   Molycote DX is to be used on things with a heavy load which is not for clocks. Yes Swiza do have a pin pallet movements but they are very good movements they come in 30 hour or 8 day mostly with alarm but you can also have them in just a timepiece. 

As you are using a watch cleaning machine you should use a recommended cleaner and the correct rinse. I always used L & R. 

Edited by oldhippy
Posted

Thanks, I certainly will get some Windles. And I will pickup a Swiza.
 

I tend to regard these travel alarm clock movements as a large pocket watch, and use the appropriate oils. 

I’m not sure about the alarm works, however. What’s the best procedure there? 

I have an Elma Super Elite cleaning machine, from 1959, which still works perfectly. It came with the original instructions which say to use 1:9 in rinse 1. I don’t use the petrol as suggested, as I work in a confined space and value my eyebrows. I’ve always used isopropyl alcohol as a final rinse for all parts other than those with shellac to dissipate any trapped moisture. But I will obtain some L&R. 

IMG_0147.jpeg

Posted

I've had and used a few cleaning machines including Elma a good little machine. To avoid damaging parts held by shellac clean them in Ronsonol lighter fluid it is harmless to shellac, have a small pot with a screw on lid as it evaporates very quick.  

Posted
On 10/12/2023 at 5:31 AM, Bill241 said:

My first thought was to let it run for four days, and then regulate as finely as possible at that point- hoping that the gain in the first four days would be countered with the loss afterwards. This assumes that the loss of torque from the spring is perfectly linear over the 8 days, and even if it works, the clock will only be working exactly to time at one point in the cycle.

It would be nice to have a picture or a better description of what you're working on. The reason is I noticed to use the words pallet stones versus Penn pallet escapement? The reason I ask is that this is a nicer eight day clock it's basically an eight day pocket watch. Possibly with a standard lever escapement. In which case you could use a timing machine the same as used in watch repair.

Then the assumption of what the mainspring will do is problematic. A lot of what the mainspring will do is determined by how was manufactured and the curvature it has. Usually mainsprings will have what's called the back curve and a lot of the stun is to live in their eyes the force that it produces. But with manufacturing techniques the way they are we tending a lot of variations in the shape of the spring which is going to translate to variations in power.

Plus if this is a standard lever escapement and you properly adjust things it should be more immune to amplitude variations. This is why when you look at the specifications for lever escapement watches they will actually have the specifications of fully wound up versus 24 hours later you should be within a range.

 

On 10/12/2023 at 11:10 AM, Bill241 said:

2, distilled water

You might increase the number of rinse to two of them versus just one. Typically with solvent-based cleaners the first was a cleaner followed by two separate rinses and somewhere in the discussion group for discussing the water-based cleaners it was suggested by others that you want to do something similar and have a second rinse of water before going to your isopropyl alcohol. 

 

 

Posted

I’m currently working on a Looping cal 51. It’s a really lovely quality item and is also a barometer and thermometer. 

I’m not sure if the brass ‘star’ wheel in the alarm mechanism is meant to be lubricated? 

IMG_6202.jpeg

Posted
30 minutes ago, Bill241 said:

Looping cal 51

Found some information on the caliber 50. Basically looks like a really big watch you should Be able to a use a watch timing machine the regulated. Also the same rules would apply like a watch for how you set up the regulating pins the escapement etc.

https://calibercorner.com/looping-caliber-50/

You will have to use a translation program possibly depending upon your language skills and towards the bottom there is a picture of the parts list

https://forumamontres.forumactif.com/t39683-mouvement-looping-51-8-jours

Once I realized that there was a parts list available I found you some parts listings. One of the unfortunate problems of the existence of parts list is that conceivably there was servicing information. But typically we only get parts listing because that's all people care about.

 

1893_Looping 50, 51.pdf 3728_Looping 44,45,50,51,62,63,65.pdf 4380_Looping_ClockParts.pdf

  • Like 1

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

    • Hi, this is the first place I found when looking for advice so I hope someone could advise me.  Im completely new to touching watches but I’ve always wondered how they work.  I’ve bought a cheap movement, an ETA replica to take apart and rebuild.  Im thinking I’ll need some screwdrivers, tweezers, movement holder and a loop? My goal is just to have a go first and see if I enjoy it enough before buying more tools.  Do I buy cheap tools for now and get better quality tools later if I enjoy it like I think I will? or will the cheap tools be a pain and take some of the fun out of it?  With quality tools being relatively expensive I’m unsure what to buy.    Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
    • Yeah I have seen 44-56 documented for Elgin 18 size elsewhere. I have the style of gauge that's like a set of feeler gauges and I never noticed before today it is faintly stamped "Elgin". Pictured is the way I have been measuring. I am going to go to a larger jewel than the 42 that had been in there. I recently won an auction on a big set of Fitrite jewels all in the little bottles, to discover that the what's actually in the bottles bears no relation to the chart of sizes printed on the box. In most cases it seems to be all mixed so in fact I have about 24 little bottles and thousands of assorted jewels of all diameters and lengths, which is better than nothing. But since I don't have a micrometer with a table, measuring for the exact diameter will be a big job. Instead I will test a lot of them in the fork slot the same way I measure with the gauge. But this is still the next thing. I have to get the escapement to unlock first.
    • it would be nice to have the exact model of the watch the or a picture so we can see exactly what you're talking about. this is because the definition of Swiss watch could be a variety of things and it be helpful if we could see exactly the watch your dealing with then in professional watch repair at least some professionals they do pre-cleaned watches. In other words the hands and dial come off and the entire movement assembled goes through a cleaning machine sometimes I think a shorter bath perhaps so everything is nice and clean for disassembly makes it easier to look for problems. Then other professionals don't like pre-cleaning because it basically obliterates the scene of the crime. Especially when dealing with vintage watches where you're looking for metal filings and problems that may visually go away with cleaning. Then usually super sticky lubrication isn't really a problem for disassembly and typically shouldn't be a problem on a pallet fork bridge because there shouldn't be any lubrication on the bridge at all as you typically do not oil the pallet fork pivots.  
    • A few things you should find out before you can mske a decision of what to do. As Richard said, what is the crown and all of the crown components made of . Then also the stem .  The crown looks to have a steel washer that retains a gasket. So be careful with what chemicals you use to dissolve any stem adhesives or the use of heat. You might swell or melt the gasket unless you are prepared to change that also . The steel washer maybe reactive to alum. Something I've just used to dissolve a broken screw from a plate. First drilled out the centre of the screw with a 0.5mm carbide . Dipped only the section that held the broken screw in Rustins rust remover. This is 40 % phosphoric acid. 3 days and the screw remains were completely dissolved, no trace of steel in the brass threads. A black puddle left in the solution.
    • I suppose this will add to the confusion I have a roller jewel assortment. It lists out American pocket watches for Elgin 18 size and even 16 size it's a 50. But not all the various companies used 50-50 does seem to be common one company had a 51 and the smallest is 43. American parts are always interesting? Francis Elgin for mainsprings will tell you the thickness of the spring other companies will not even though the spring for the same number could come in a variety of thicknesses. But if we actually had the model number of your watch we would find it probably makes a reference that the roller jewel came in different dimensions. So overlook the parts book we find that? So it appears to be 18 and 16 size would be the same sort of the arson different catalog numbers and as I said we don't have your Mongol know which Log number were supposed to be using. Variety of materials garnered her sapphire single or double but zero mention about diameters. Then in a section of rollers in this case rollers with jewels we do get this down in the notes section Roller specifications but of course zero reference to the jewel size. I was really hoping the roller jewel assortment would give us sizes it doesn't really. But it does show a picture of how one particular roller jewel gauge is used  
×
×
  • Create New...