Jump to content

AS 1920 calendar day wheel frustration!


Recommended Posts

8 hours ago, marcbooskay said:

I have been a watch hobbyist for 25 years. 5 years ago, I opened my watch repair shop in the Durham, North Carolina area and also via mail-order. My website is TheWatchFixer.com .  The watch in question is a customer's watch and is currently disassembled in a parts tray. It's a 1975 Hamilton Clermont model. I am attaching a photo of what it would look like if assembled.

Clermont.jpeg

Can the owner not tell you if it has always had this day/date change-over discrepancy  ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, Neverenoughwatches said:

Can the owner not tell you if it has always had this day/date change-over discrepancy  ?

That's an excellent question! I didn't pick up on it in my initial evaluation, but the owner is convinced that the calendar worked just fine when he brought it to me. So, because I failed to identify any calendar issue when I took it in, the only thing I can do is make it right on my own time and dime. I am just not understanding what I may have done to make it malfunction as it is. It's a head scratcher for sure...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, marcbooskay said:

That's an excellent question! I didn't pick up on it in my initial evaluation, but the owner is convinced that the calendar worked just fine when he brought it to me. So, because I failed to identify any calendar issue when I took it in, the only thing I can do is make it right on my own time and dime. I am just not understanding what I may have done to make it malfunction as it is. It's a head scratcher for sure...

🤔 are the push fingers attached to the wheel or part of it ?

If they are attached has one come free and possibly jammed itself in a new position ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

I want to provide a follow-up to this most interesting issue. I found a seller in Mannheim, Germany who had the calendar wheel (that I strongly suspected was bad or wrong) and I purchased it from them. It came in today, and it is the exact opposite orientation of the one I had. I installed it and the day and the date now change over in exact unison with each other. It's a thing of beauty! I have no clue about the bad calendar wheel. I don't see how it could have been re-arranged in any way, as it appears to be a riveted part. I can only suspect that the part I had was not correct for the movement? But yet, my customer says it worked just fine when it was brought to me? So, the only take-away I can share here is that if you buy watches or take in watches for repair, always do a thorough functional triage of the watch prior to opening it. It's important to see how it works before trying to fix anything, and may help with your sanity when you run into a problem like this. In conclusion, it was indeed a bad part, the watch is working like new, and you can cue the "Twilight Zone" music. Thanks to everyone for your assistance.

  • Like 3
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 was finally able to get my Nikon D3500 DSLR setup to use with my microscope.  I want to thank @GuyMontag for modifying his 3D printed microscope adapter design so I could get the camera image to focus properly.  The shorter adapter did the trick.  His new design file allows for the easy customization of the height. The setup I ended up with is a F mount to M42 lens adapter, a M42 to M42 mm focusing helicoid, and the 3D printed microscope adapter to connect the DSLR to the microscope. This setup gives a much better field of view than the microscope camera, with 0.35X camera mount, setup that I was using.  With minimum zoom, through the eyepieces I get a 57 mm field of view.  Through the DSLR, I get about 60 mm FOV.  There is vignetting in the corners, but I was rather expecting that.  My goal was to get the whole movement in the FOV, which wasn't happening with the microscope camera setup.
    • Hi Tom, thank you for the speedy reply. Yeah, following the instructions it will not allow me to change any of the subdials not in position 2 or 3. As for what you tell me in position 2 while holding the reset or start stop changing crown position only changes the hour hand as for position 3 same thing happens but it also moves the minute hand as it should. Am I missing something?  
    • Hello and welcome from Leeds,
    • notice my quote of me? sometimes in my long-winded messages things may be perhaps get lost. But there's a reference to the spring and the entire watch can stop which I believe you're having now? which is why when you're having a problematic running watch you do not put things on that you do not need. So for instance you can remove the bridge and remove the pinion and see if the watch will run.  the problem with this type of way of driving a secondhand is you end up with too much play between the driving gear and pinion. so basically that little tiny play in the pinion translates to the secondhand and the secondhand will drift around by quite a bit. so the spring has to provide enough force to keep the pinion in place but not to either stop the watch worst-case or reduce the amplitude down to an unacceptable amount.  
    • Hello everyone - this is my first post. I have a few older watches that need some TLC and I like to fix stuff, so this forum seems to be the perfect place for me!
×
×
  • Create New...