Jump to content

One More Now I'm Back From France...


WillFly

Recommended Posts

It didn't arrive as expected this morning, so I'm all a-trembly, but I can post a couple of pics of the latest newbie about to hit the Fly household. It's an Anker - yes, and that is spelled correctly - which is a German make from the 1950s.

 

post-64-0-40023100-1402916924_thumb.jpg

post-64-0-23681300-1402916941_thumb.jpg

 

The movement is described as: "The Uwersi  Cal. 57/8, 21 jewel lever movement" - so I shall take a good  look at it when it arrives. Just been serviced, apparently.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As usual, I've been doing some research into the Uwersi Cal. 57/8 SCI/CLD movement. Here's a description of it from a website specialising in early German watch movements (translated by the writer into English from German):

 

The Uwersi 57/8 was available in different versions, with and without indirect driven center second and with or without date indication (which was advertized on the case back with using three patents, but consists in fact only of a gear and a spring). The movement described here contained everything. The flat nickel balance, without screw, long regulator arm and shock protection, regulates a conventional pin lever movement. However, there's one speciality with the pin anchor: The pins don't consist of metal, as usual, but of synthetic rubis. Technically, this is only a minor improvement, but it helps using two more advertizing-effective jewels. And these two are not the only additional jewels in this movement: All the gears are not only beared in jewels, but they all have cap jewels, too, even if there's a gap of a millimeter beween the two jewels. The second hand axle is even beared in two jewels, since it runs in the minute train, which is beared, and has got an additional jewel put losely on it. The only position, where a jewel bearing would have been really useful, at the spring, which keeps the indirect second hand gear in position, is of course un-jewelled... On the dial side, you see a familiar picture: A simple rocking bar winding mechanism, a very simple click spring mechanism with just a spring and the advertized calendar mechanism, which only advances slowly and cannot be corrected quickly. This mechanism of three patents consists only of one gear with a pin. It drives the small date disc with the tiny date numbers. These better pin-lever movements were quite popular in the early fifties, when nobody had enough money for a "good" watch, and last but not least, its unusual details make it a collecting-worth movement.

 

Fascinating stuff. And a pic from the site to go with it:

 

post-64-0-75391600-1402921740_thumb.jpg

post-64-0-06146100-1402921755_thumb.jpg

 

And here's the technical description:

 

Manufacturer Uwersi Caliber 57/8 SCI CLD

Number of jewels 21

Escapement pin lever

Balance Nickel

Shock protection(s) none

Balance cock direction clockwise

Hairspring stud fixed

Regulator type

Hairspring key

Movement construction Fork
Escapement wheel, Fourth wheel, Third wheel, Center wheel, Mainspring barrel

Features SCI,QG Functions Hour, minute, second, day

Beats per hour 18000

Size 101/2'''

Production time 195x

Image in Flume

Werksucher  1957 43

Edited by WillFly
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mmm... this arrived yesterday - and wasn't working. The seller, who seems a nice guy, reckoned it had been damaged in the post as he'd checked it prior to posting and it was running perfectly. I tend to agree with him. Anyway, the upshot is that I'm sending it back to him and he'll either repair it for me or refund the cash. I'm happy with either.

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

    • Quite true , anybody visiting the forum can access that information, may be better holding that link in a private message that only members can access. Then again anyone can become a member hmmm.  Have a seperate email unrelated to your regular use email ? I did think about real names, mine isn't. 
    • Anyway, new machines are designed to fail after 5 years. 😮‍💨
    • Great idea - but can access to this thread or the list be restricted to member only somehow? Or move it to a new category linked from here, and make that category members only? At the moment the list - with all the real names & contact info - is totally unprotected and accessible to any spambot or other malicious webscapers, which is rather worrying. (Just tried it with a different browser & via proxy in the US - this thread and the list are fully public, at present).  
    • I've been programming, building electronics for, repairing and retrofitting machine tools and industrial automation systems for over 40 years now. I could have retired, but I always have work queued up - and I still enjoy it; also building electronics, robots and animatronics (among other things) as hobbies. There is a vast range of work in machine tool / robotics / industrial automation field, and not all that many really good people, who fully understand the electronics and software side, rather than having been forced in to it from the mechanical side & struggling with anything to do with electronics or software. I can't help with the qualifications side - things have changed too much over the years, & I started my business before I left school. At the time I was getting criticised and even penalised by teachers for spending too much time on the school "computer" (a massive early programmable calculator, really) because computers & programming were a waste of time, according to them!   One big problem I am aware of is that a lot of university courses have little to no correlation to real-world industrial machines and equipment - most of the equipment in the field that needs work is old! You have to be an enthusiast and study older system and techniques; it's no good knowing the state of the art electronics & software inside out when you are more likely to be working on a 50 year old machine than a brand new one. The oldest machine I routinely work on was made in 1911; many are from the 1950s - 80s. New machines tend to be under warranties or service contracts, so only the makers agents ever touch them - it's the older gear that gets sold on after it's showing its age and really needs actual engineers!  
    • I got this set from Cousins. I believe the arbors are steel and it's been working very well. Not all Chinese sets are the same. Some a decent and some are crap. My most appreciated mainspring winder is my Master Craft Mainspring Winder:  
×
×
  • Create New...