Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I bought this staking tool on Ebay for 220€ plus shipping. As far I can tell it is in acceptable shape.

I could not discover any brand name on the tool or on the case. Is it possible to identify what brand and model this is?PXL_20250404_174819547.thumb.jpg.94ddb3ca3b08c12af1b92ccc33a50676.jpgPXL_20250404_174857278.thumb.jpg.46a6e1ac323e74d93a9957e4a94dd6e5.jpgPXL_20250404_174906233.thumb.jpg.ba2097eff37292e2dc6c683d45e41d61.jpgPXL_20250404_174938580.thumb.jpg.5c831ed38acec9b826f7ed1f6b2bcbf6.jpgPXL_20250404_175153991.thumb.jpg.f9f211d531a381ebaac95e73fd7e6b5f.jpgPXL_20250404_175200616.thumb.jpg.aa28e3ec3286790f56dcbd5799d61dc6.jpg

Posted

Hi. First impressions is that it’s a good serviceable set with all of the required bits. It has a base  aka K&D inverto  so as to be able to use the punches as stakes if fitted to the bottom.  All the text is in German  which would imply it’s of European origin but not necessarily so as it could have been made for the European market. All in all a good set.

  • Like 2
Posted
22 hours ago, watchweasol said:

Hi. First impressions is that it’s a good serviceable set with all of the required bits. It has a base  aka K&D inverto  so as to be able to use the punches as stakes if fitted to the bottom.  All the text is in German  which would imply it’s of European origin but not necessarily so as it could have been made for the European market. All in all a good set.

Thanks for this assessment, I'm glad to hear that I made a good choice.

Can you explain what you mean with "serviceable"? Do you mean that it is possible to get spare parts if necessary?

21 hours ago, praezis said:

No name punched on the stakes?

Maybe WELO , a German brand.

Frank

You are right, it is WELO, this is punched on the stakes.

There are two disks in the set. The left one is the one that is visible in the photos in the first message in this thread:
PXL_20250405_104724406.thumb.jpg.a7923355774ed26d6466df96b5e85ee7.jpg

The left disk has a cutout so that the pole fits flat into the disk:

PXL_20250405_104724406-EDIT.thumb.jpg.a5653aa67178c23b31f9d832c3bc5cab.jpg

This cutout is not present in the second disk, so the top end of the pole would protrude.

What is the purpose of the second disk to the right, and is it actually original without the cutout for the pole?

Posted
38 minutes ago, stm said:

What is the purpose of the second disk to the right, and is it actually original without the cutout for the pole?

Afaik you can use it on the base as separate anvil.

Frank

  • Like 1
Posted

The word “ serviceable” means that looked after and properly used and not abused it should last you for a long time. These are precision instruments and should be treated as such.   ie.   Cleaned and oiled occasionally and not used for onerous tasks.

  • Like 1
Posted

Good price, the stakes and stumps look very clean and the extended base is a great addition to the tool. The other anvil is curious , maybe from another tool or like Frank said usable on top of the pin held one or on its own. 

  • Like 1
Posted

This site might be helpful.  I used to teach a technical class (twice a year) in Berlin 35+ years ago.  I could kinda sus out a little German to get along while there.  It is all gone now.  So Frank will have to help us.

  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, praezis said:

Not sure if I said it clear enough:
- remove 1 
- mount the anvil plate on 2

IMG_5434.thumb.jpeg.b90993c5c82f68a0b5a9c350bfc6cddf.jpeg

Frank

Thanks for the clarification, that was not clear. I tried this out now:
PXL_20250406_175320430.thumb.jpg.898376f2125a4519800a5d053cacd994.jpgPXL_20250406_175304201.thumb.jpg.64bbf294dfe4849c9e6070b53380573d.jpg 

Like this? 

19 minutes ago, praezis said:

No 😀

IMG_5435.jpeg.bd93da64fb112391b9a7e86a2de0985c.jpeg

 

Argh, overlooked again  that you had replied already... 

Ok, thanks! What can this setup be used for?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I would have jumped all over that set if it had come across my Ebay search results !  Very nice , well taken care of. I probably buy 10+ staking sets a month for my restoration hobby and think you found a very nice set, at a great price that should last you a lifetime. 

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'm in the " crack on with what you have " camp. Since you are in the Uk Ingersolls are plentiful, mostly the Great Britain models, but the Swiss made ones are still fairly common on Ebay. The New Chinese clones, were difficult to get parts for...🤔....I'm not sure if they still are, the quality wasn't that great either when it came to things like shock springs. Another complete watch same model Ingersoll will probably set you back less that a couple of clone parts that you will almost certainly lose or break. I never took apart a new working movement, I don't believe it held back my learning at all, in fact quite the opposite.
    • Yeah I can't take credit there - I thought the plastic punch thing was a work of genius when I first discovered it!  
    • Since I've learned lots here I thought I'd share a tip I picked up elsewhere and put to the test... For that 6105/6309 bezel lume pip look I've punched a clear plastic bottle of water, sanded it for the frost effect, removed the (smaller) pip from a standard/cheap replacement bezel, drilled it out to 2.5mm and fitted it using a smaller punch - fresh lume to hold into place.  Pressing into place is a bit awkward but you soon get the hang of it, and the end result is pretty decent I'd say... The worst part probably being the drilling rather than the pip!      It started out like this: 
    • Ive asked this at a Seiko forum but I know there's plenty of experience here too...   As I have it the recently discovered servicing technique on these is that you stuff the crown full of gaskets and work it until the recessed washer pops, remove the washer, switch the gasket out, dish the washer and push it back into place, levelling out the washer in the process? First attempt did not go to plan... I tried using a plastic pusher to manipulate the gaskets in the crown... Wasn't strong enough and I was struggling to even get the gaskets in up until it broke.   Rethink consists of making/using actual tools: I don't have a staking set, so I've got the old man fashioning a metal pusher, essentially a 2.45mm OD tube with 1.6mm ID with a 6mm press the other end. Also got him on a dishing block/conical stake (sorry I'm terrible with terms) and a holder for the crown while I'm working on it...   I figure that's enough to do the process described above? Push with the metal pusher, dish the washer with the conical stake, press back in with wider flat press (drilled centre so it doesn't catch on the tap).    Plan is to stuff, press by hand and repeat? If that doesn't work by hand I've a drill press I could attach the pusher to for a little more leverage if needed. (Obviously I don't want to go too mad with that, and hopefully can avoid it altogether...)   Sounds like a plan? I'd welcome any advice here, since I really don't want to wreck a crown. Having replaced all the other seals though id really like to sort these too. I welcome any input/advice from those who have been there and done it... Thanks!
×
×
  • Create New...