Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I am not familiar with this clock but I suspect it will be a pin lever escapement.. It’s surprising what a different performance you will get after it has been cleaned and lubrication.. A picture of the movement would be nice to see.

Edited by clockboy
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, clockboy said:

I am not familiar with this clock but I suspect it will be a pin lever escapement.. It’s surprising what a different performance you will get after it has been cleaned and lubrication.. A picture of the movement would be nice to see.

Thanks clockboy, yes it is a pin lever . The rate is all over the place, the hairspring passes through a slot along its terminal curve , a really big slot compared to the  curb pin spacings on a watch. I'm wondering whether to close up the gap its something like 5 times the width of the hairspring, it does regulate when its adjusted but not consistently when set within any one position of the regulator Obviously the movement is only ever in one vertical position so might not be worth chancing any alteration.

17 minutes ago, clockboy said:

I am not familiar with this clock but I suspect it will be a pin lever escapement.. It’s surprising what a different performance you will get after it has been cleaned and lubrication.. A picture of the movement would be nice to see.

 

20231014_135336.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

32 minutes ago, watchweasol said:

Hi. NEW,   One look at its construction and you can tell it’s fron the lower end, a movement see in many travel clocks some with an alarm.  Never consistent but did the job. Pin lever cleaned up a nd a drop of windles oil and it’s a runner.

I needed to start simple 😄 , it only cost me 3 quid and i thought it was a bonny little thing. I have some Mobius large clock oil, but I'm thinking it will run on just about anything. The only plate  wear that looks obvious is the fork lever hole.

16972945768605166835725282677314.jpg

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 think you are right. I can see now that the case would have been blued from new with a finish similar to the inner surfaces of the opening case back. As you say, there's no easy way to match that finish at home (obviously a home chemical blue such as the gun blue isn't quite acceptable). I will stick with cleaning with soap and water in the ultrasonic and consider the tarnish to be part of its charm. 
    • I can try a big tweezer the biggest I had in my set didn’t do the trick but I’ll check if my wife has some none watchmaking ones. 
    • Yes, gum netal, which actually means iron. It is thick enough to be grinded in order to remove the rust pits and then polished, but it will need blackening oxidation in the end for protection from getting rusty. The watch has nothing to do with the railways, it is the same like the 'squirrel' candys - You do not really expect to find a squirrel inside...
    • I think the app is misinterpreted the noise because of the extra case construction    Tom
    • I have just picked up a vintage soviet Zarja watch and I have been inspecting it prior to putting it on the 'to be serviced' pile. When I measured it with the timegrapher app, I found it was gaining loads of time. Taking the case back off, I find it's a tiny movement within a relatively large watch and it has a separate steel cover over the movement which presumably holds it in place against the caseback.   Checking the app again without the cover, I find it is actually running reasonably well for an untouched old watch. Putting the cover and the caseback back in place and it reads as massively gaining time again. This behaviour is consistent every time I take the cover on and off. I have checked the balance cock is fixed and the screw is tight, so I assume that the cover and case back are pinching the movement in some way and making it run fast. Not sure I can see how that works because if the cover is touching the balance, surely it would make it stop not run faster? It can't be touching just the hairspring to make it effectively shorter.  Placing only the cover in place or placing just the caseback in place (not even snapping it shut) both cause the fast running. Pretty sure there are a couple of millimetres clearance between the case back and the movement when the cover isn't there. I have also checked the watch, cover and case back for magnetism with another phone app but none of them seem to have an appreciable magnetic field. Perhaps I need to preemptively demagnetise and get a real compass to check them with.  I appreciate that this is just an app using the built in microphone on my phone - could it be misreading a ringing / reverberation of this cover to give the wrong result? Observing the watch just running on the bench closed up, it does seem to be appreciably gaining time. I will wind it, set the time and leave it running overnight and see how it does with no cover / back in place. Perhaps I will also see how it performs on the wrist to rule out misreading by the app    What am I missing here?
×
×
  • Create New...