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Posted

Hi

I’m currently deep down into trying to figure out hairspring manipulation (I know it’s quite an important step…)

I kind of understand how to make the hairspring round or flat again but I commonly have a centering issue with overcoil hairsprings.

This one for example is an Omega 265 I feel I managed to get back into a correct shape but the collet is still slightly misaligned. I feel like the outer coil is in good shape and the issue should be in the transversal part but maybe Inm missing something entirely.  And I could not find a video showing how to deal with this issue so here I am 🙂

IMG_3011.thumb.jpeg.d97b882d1e0e72c00455416bbf12b989.jpeg
 

any tip on what I could try?

 

thanks!

 

Posted

ОК,

IMG_3011.jpeg.1a26f906512c0695d580960def042d8b.thumb.jpeg.55566b73e50206bd1c11b97ca92e5724.jpeg

 

The red dot is center of the collet, the green dot is center of the bearing. The white line passes through this dots. The yellow line is bisector of the segment between dots. The pink dot is where the bisector crosses the outer coil. Now, bending in the pink dot will move the collet towards/from the bearing center. You must open (make more straight) the overcoil where the pink dot is in order to make centers coincide.

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Posted

Firstly I would aim to get the collet centred in the hairspring, then adjust so it sits over the jewel hole.

From your pic I'm struggling to tell whether the collet is centred - does it open too quickly at the arrow? 
If so, a tweak near the pin should fix it.

If you need to adjust it, have a look in this lesson from the "Chicago School of Watchmaking" which explains how to adjust collets in hairsprings to get them centred.

chicago lesson 19.PDF

To get the collet over the hole (assuming the rest of the spring has been sorted), I just grab the collet and pull the whole spring in the direction it needs to go.

image.png.de68fc366534502f94104bbb096f49a2.png

 

 

 

Posted

Nev‘s advice would be my first idea, too (or even changing the whole overcoil, as the straight sector is too short). However the coil is already almost straight there, more straightening hardly advisable.

But assuming the up-bend (the „knee“) is at the red arrow and realizing that the gap between coils is too wide there, I would first bend at the yellow arrow, the other end of Nev‘s yellow line.

It not yet enough, go to Nev‘s end of the yellow line.

IMG_5582.jpeg.d558bf7b0fcbd0025d22ce72faf34151.jpeg

Frank

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