Jump to content

Which Watch Have You Got Coming In The Mail ? Show Us !!!


SCOTTY

Recommended Posts

3 hours ago, AndyHull said:

image.thumb.png.c8f48eb1de1bc2dffa741ce54ff0e359.png

Its not pretty, but it is interesting. An early hardwood and Bakelite cased Metamec electric clock.  I'm intrigued by the idea of powering it from a 240V 50Hz source derived from a USB power bank. Failing that, then I guess I'll just run it the more conventional way. Needless to say, it cost next to nothing, however it seems there are quite a number of collectors of Metamec clocks. Now.. I REALLY do have to stay away from ebay. ?

Nice find & interesting. I'm a fan of Telechron & GE/Telechron clocks. I like the Red Dot indicator on these (Earlier models).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telechron

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

While we are on the subject of syncronous clocks.........Got this Ferranti Model No2 (1934 to 1936) Bakelite clock coming.......And also this Model No 12 Talbot Pewter cased one (1934 to 1936) coming as well......I suspect the perfect dial on the No 2 clock will find it's way onto the pewter one......

Ferranti No12 clock bottom view.jpg

Ferranti No12 clock front2.jpg

Ferranti No12 clock oblique view.jpg

Ferranti Model No2.jpg

Ferranti Model No2 back.jpg

Edited by JohnD
  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

RIMG0063.thumb.JPG.801f7ae170dadef5f74c5472bce026a7.JPG

RIMG0062.thumb.JPG.6574ee817549e5a0557909d3ef84a04a.JPG

I'm a bit of a fan of Russian watches, and in my opinion not only are they pretty robust, but with a little care, they can be very presentable. 

Just to illustrate that point, here are a couple of 404 club members.

One is 9ct gold and originally cost the best part of £1,000.00 and the other is a USSR era 20 mikron gold plated Sekonda. Now I'm not saying they are equivalent, but neither would either of them embarrass you at a formal function.

RIMG0066.thumb.JPG.b77aa0451beef2d8489059c88aee386f.JPG

Sure the lines of the Sekonda are a little more solid, and the hands and case, perhaps not quite as well finessed, but on the wrist it is a pretty close match, and I know which one I would be less worried about scratching.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, luiazazrambo said:

Well, just movements. Waiting for them. Bought them because they were colorful. ? About 50p each. Would you recognize these?

Forgot to say that I must stay away from eBay! ?

One is ETA Caliber 280.002, i believe.

Did they come with a bottle of Heinz White Vinegar? You will need it for cleaning as some batteries leaked.

Edited by Poljot
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Poljot said:

A previous fella opened the watch, broke some parts, did not even recover all remaining pieces out of the case, replaced the back cover and declared it dead

Funny, my only micro-rotor (I think same base movement as yours but with added date and extra jewels) came to me via a similar route, only with an extra "red herring" part to test my patience.

Mine also took me a very long time to sort out because I'm a skinflint and didn't want to fork out for new parts if I could source a donor at an appropriate price ?.

These are great fun to work on though, yours came up rather nice...

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Marc said:

Funny, my only micro-rotor (I think same base movement as yours but with added date and extra jewels) came to me via a similar route, only with an extra "red herring" part to test my patience.

Mine also took me a very long time to sort out because I'm a skinflint and didn't want to fork out for new parts if I could source a donor at an appropriate price ?.

These are great fun to work on though, yours came up rather nice...

Thanks for your kind words :-). Yea, at the end it was "like new", but Man-O-Man, winding that beast feels so different from any other watch. I did everything - from mainspring to the balance cap jewels - cleaned / oiled properly, but due to poor poor winding gear ratio - it is a pain to wind that watch. No wonder one that intermediate crown wheel could not take it anymore :-(. I found small piece deep inside the movement between the mainplate and bridge. What did not help that Cousins sent me the wrong part due to cataloguing error on their website. Then i had to re-order Buren part (identical). Took some time to sort things out. Btw, the coupling wheel (automatic winding component) requires braking grease just like mainspring barrel wall. All extra friction while winding is actually created mostly by this, swastika-like looking, coupling wheel... ?

Bulova7.PNG

Bulova8 - Copy.PNG

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 12/20/2020 at 12:09 PM, Poljot said:

A previous fella opened the watch, broke some parts, did not even recover all remaining pieces out of the case, replaced the back cover and declared it dead. I had to resurrect it :-). Thanks God, CousinsUK had spare parts available.

 

Isn't a wonderful feeling to be able to succeed at a repair that others have been instantly overwhelmed by?  To take a small collection of parts that had daunted a lesser man, and make a nice, running watch from it?  That I think is a great and satisfying skill to have.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, KarlvonKoln said:

Isn't a wonderful feeling to be able to succeed at a repair that others have been instantly overwhelmed by?  To take a small collection of parts that had daunted a lesser man, and make a nice, running watch from it?  That I think is a great and satisfying skill to have.

Thank you for your kind words! ?

It's a very slim automatic movement. Just take a look at the oscillating weight (rotor) size and how it is fitted.

Buren1281 - Copy.PNG

Bulova  - Copy.PNG

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The watch I have coming in the mail will not belong to me.  But I get to work on it. My brother has had good pay these past couple months. And he wants his Elgin serviced (along with four others).  I include the photo to show off the decorated movement.  Five mechanical watches - and a brother who knows the costs and wishes to spend for proper maintenance.  I may be able to pick up the staking set I was eyeing sooner, rather than later.

received_2706089822973984.jpeg

Edited by KarlvonKoln
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, KarlvonKoln said:

The watch I have coming in the mail will not belong to me.  But I get to work on it. My brother has had good pay these past couple months. And he wants his Elgin serviced (along with four others).  I include the photo to show off the decorated movement.  Five mechanical watches - and a brother who knows the costs and wishes to spend for proper maintenance.  I may be able to pick up the staking set I was eyeing sooner, rather than later.

 

Beautiful watch. Is it Elgin 241 16S?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Poljot said:

Beautiful watch. Is it Elgin 241 16S?

I believe so, yes.  My youngest brother has a collection of antique pocket watches also. He may have as many as I do by now.  My middle brother collects other things and isn't into watches much.

But I have a couple rarer ones, and if it remains unsold until my income tax refund, I know where to find a real treasure.  I won't jinx it by naming it though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, KarlvonKoln said:

I believe so, yes.  My youngest brother has a collection of antique pocket watches also. He may have as many as I do by now.  My middle brother collects other things and isn't into watches much.

But I have a couple rarer ones, and if it remains unsold until my income tax refund, I know where to find a real treasure.  I won't jinx it by naming it though.

What is the serial number - I may be able to confirm. 11702841 ? I can't really see it on the photo.

A real treasure?! Common, where is your team spirit?! ? LOL

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was trying to make out the serial from his photo too.  I can take a better picture when it gets here.  That, and I will be able to look right at it and see what it says.  Until then, I can only see the photo as well as you can.
As to the mysterious watch I've been keeping an eye on: it was recently relisted on Ebay.  I am not authority enough to authenticate anything, but I found another online that was a dead-ringer for it which was documented. It is a key wind-key set open-face pocket watch.  Seller says it runs but has not been cleaned or serviced.  (Likely more of a story there, but I think I could tackle it.)  The price is good for what it is.  Thing is - it has a big name attached - seriously big - and I'd been worried it might be fake.  The pics all look good, but they're just pics right now. Once it's in front of me, I'll know.  I have to say though, for a movement in that good a shape, for that age, and looking nice overall, what the seller asks is not too dear.  I'm just concerned that each time I mention a nice find, that jinxes it and it gets sold before I can snatch it up.  So, mum's the word.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 12/23/2020 at 10:59 AM, Poljot said:

Looks beautiful, but is it under your serial number?

It falls in that range, for an Elgin.  My brother may know more. He probably has already looked it up. The post is bringing it sometime today, so I will know more later.

UPDATE on 12/24: I was wrong - it's a 241 like we thought in the beginning.  It just came in the mail. I can read the serial number now - 11709941.  On the Bidfun archive, the picture looked rather different, so it had me confused.  But with the correct serial number, the Pocket Watch Database pulled up a 241.  And that one looked correct.  So now I know.  It really was so much easier with the watch and all the info in front of me.  Pics only take a person so far.

Edited by KarlvonKoln
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've remained silent on this thread, and at the risk of upsetting everyone, the thing that worries me the most the the apparent absence of Mark. The moderators do a great job and the members also pitch in, and the site seems to run itself, but it is a concern for the future of this forum when the owner is absent for all intents and purposes. Like many of the comments above I would hate to log in one day and things be closed down as I rely on this site for ideas and knowledge and also cheer me up. maybe the Moderators could reach out to him, assuming he does not read this thread, and express our concerns and let us know the plans going forward? some kind of WRT ark
    • That was the exact reason for me starting this thread watchie. Still we haven't worked out how the regulars are going to hook up if it goes tits up. I honestly think something should be arranged to stay in contact, we all help each other so much. 
    • Yeah ive watched that a few times before,  i couldnt find my old school dividers to scribe it up 😅 Yep thats the guy i bought a roll from . Thanks Nicklesilver that answers that perfectly and more or less what i thought an experiment over time would prove . The jumper arm is quite thick along its length, i left it that way intentionally, i thought the original was probably very thin, i didnt see that it was already missing. Setting isn't particularly stiff as such just positive, i still need to take it out and polish where it mates with the stem release. 
    • Yes, "Sold out" is difficult to understand. There doesn't seem to be a lot going on. It's been nine months since any new video was published on the Watch Repair Channel. The Level 4 course on watchfix.com has been in progress for what feels like forever (several years!?). Maybe Mark's enterprises aren't doing well or perhaps already so profitable there's nothing much to motivate him for more material. Or, perhaps these days he's more into crochet. The real reason is probably something entirely different but it would be nice/interesting to know. I don't mean to sound gloomy or pessimistic, but I wouldn't be surprised to be met by an HTTP 404. Every day feels like a gift. Speaking of watchfix.com I've been postponing the "Level 5: Servicing Chronograph Watches" course for a very, very long time. Anyway, I just enrolled on it so it's going to be very interesting to see the videos. I must say, IMO there's nothing really that can compete with Mark's courses when it comes to presentation and video quality. It's simply world-class and makes me associate with some really expensive BBC productions.
    • Steel has some funny properties, or at least counterintuitive. The modulus of elasticity is effectively (not exactly, but close enough) the same for steel that is annealed and hardened. What changes is the point of plastic deformation* . If the movement of your spring doesn't pass that, it should work fine. It looks a little thick, I would thin it a bit maybe from the main body out about halfway, maybe 10-20% thinner (not in thickness, along its form). But if it works it works!   *So- if you have two bars of the same steel, one annealed, one at 600 Vickers (general hardness watch arbors might be), clamp them to a table so the same length is hanging out, and put a weight on the ends, they will bend the same amount. But if you continue to add weight, then remove it, at a point the annealed bar won't return to its original straightness. That's the point of plastic deformation. But up to that point, as springs, they are the same. However- their wear characteristics will be very very different. And getting the hardened bar past its point of plastic deformation takes a lot more effort.
×
×
  • Create New...