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Posted

I am interested in understanding what the minimum effective method is for removing balance staffs without damaging the balance wheel arms.  I have seen the use of a Platax tool, a balance staff remover, a Horia jewelling tool and a lathe to cut the rivet.  I have also seen people get lucky and just punch out the staff with a staking set.

What do you all do to remove balance staffs safely?

 

A Balance Staff Remover

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Using a Horia tool

 

Posted (edited)

This has been discussed in great detail several times already. All of the methods you mention carry some level of risk.

If you search for @praezis posts on the subject, you can find convincing arguments why cutting off the hub (not the rivet) is the safest method.

Edited by Klassiker
  • Like 3
Posted
2 hours ago, Neverenoughwatches said:

Cut the hub off not the rivet with a graver, quick and simple.

13 minutes ago, Klassiker said:

you can find convincing arguments why cutting off the hub (not the rivet) is the safest method.

This is the best option - if you have a lathe.  For those of us without, I use a Balance Staff Remover as shown in your pic. Using this, I have not seen any damage to a balance.  Rolex recommend just pushing it out as their balance arms are quite hard.

But, as @Klassiker suggests, do a search of the forum and you will find plenty of discussion.

Posted
9 minutes ago, mikepilk said:

This is the best option - if you have a lathe.  For those of us without, I use a Balance Staff Remover as shown in your pic. Using this, I have not seen any damage to a balance.  Rolex recommend just

Yes, being lathe deprived is a problem that I have, so obviously interested in solutions that don't require one. 

The Balance Staff removers are interesting. I wasn't sure if you could get them in a size to suit a typical wristwatch movement, I thought they were more suited for pocket watch balances. 

I was surprised to see a staff just pushed out with a Horia tool but I guess if you get a very close fitting stump it would potentially do the same amount of damage as a remover (the only difference being that the remover seems to clamp down the cross arms of the balance immediately surrounding the staff). I did read somewhere that Rolex (who apparently recommend this) balance wheels are harder than others. This is maybe one to try on already scrap balance. 

Posted
5 minutes ago, Simeon said:

The Balance Staff removers are interesting. I wasn't sure if you could get them in a size to suit a typical wristwatch movement, I thought they were more suited for pocket watch balances. 

The same tool will work on all sizes of balance. You sit the staff in the correct size hole in the staking set base. The tool them clamps the balance arms, and then the punch pushes the staff out.

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  • Like 1
Posted

The pushing out method in modern times comes from Rolex, and they have specifically made staffs to accommodate it. I believe Elgin did something similar in the past.

 

If you don't have a lathe, then a Platax or something like the K&D tool that holds the balance arms firmly down is the best. Still a risk of opening the hole. If you have a monometallic balance (no steel) you can soak in a saturated solution if aluminum to dissolve the staff. This won't harm the balance, and is preferable to punching out.

Posted
4 minutes ago, nickelsilver said:

If you have a monometallic balance (no steel) you can soak in a saturated solution if aluminum to dissolve the staff. This won't harm the balance, and is preferable to punching out.

That's another interesting solution. Thanks for that. 

Aren't the Elgin staffs specifically designed to be a friction fit rather than riveted?

Posted
40 minutes ago, Simeon said:

That's another interesting solution. Thanks for that. 

Aren't the Elgin staffs specifically designed to be a friction fit rather than riveted?

The rolex...the rivets made to brake away easily, probably what you saw happening with the Horia tool.

It's not just about bending the balance wheel arms , which seems to be what these accessories prevent. Potential staff hole deformation....over one or many staff changes. Then we have Chronoglide popping out staffs with a staking set and proudly showing a wobbly wheel. ??

Removing the staff is just one part of the process of replacement. Staking on a new one is just as easy if not more so to mess up.



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