Jump to content

Time To Retrain


Recommended Posts

Hi Guys,

 

Just introducing myself and giving you guys some background on how I came to this forum.

 

I've been in the IT Industry since 1992. Unfortunately, IT positions are rapidly being outsourced to places like India and Malaysia, and this will only increase exponentially in the next few years. 

 

My last position was made redundant after being employed by them for many years.  Even though I received high merits on my monthly reports; there simply was no positions being retained ... it all went overseas to Malaysia.  Because of my skills, I was one of the last people to be made redundant, and having to train foreign workers to replace my friends at work, and eventually myself, not only left a bad taste in my mouth, but was also a huge wake-up call that IT Tech Support is finished in my country.
 
So, I am dedicating myself to learn about watch repair in the hope of being indentured as a apprentice: and retrain into a new career path with a future.
 

I know it is a hard occupation to get into (especially at my age), but I'm a hard worker and determined to succeed.  I want to learn as much as possible to have an edge over other being interviewed for the few positions being offered.  I would appreciate information on study material that you guys recommend ... books and apprentice training course material that I can purchase to further my own personal advancement,  until I get that job offer.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome & good luck in your new career. Its good to change tack, 6 years ago I owned a rapidly declining print business in London, luckily I managed to sell it off and since then have worked as a self employed handyman. I now look forward to getting up on Mondays, work is varied, the order book is full.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome to the forums Lawson,  it's difficult to think of a safe job these days,  undertaker, springs to mind, Dr's, dentists or best of the lot a Banker.

 

The best advice I know is to download and read this book  http://dump.petervanwezel.nl/Practical_Watch_Repairing.pdf  if you read all of it you will have a very good understanding of mechanical watches.  Next step would be to get hold of some scrap movements that you can practice on, there is usually something on Ebay or try friends.  When you can take them apart and put them back together you will have reached a milestone.  Also watch Marks videos on YouTube to see an expert at work. Hope this helps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the warm welcome :)

 

Autowind: Thanks for the book advise mate.  I did a bit of a search on this forum last night and spotted that book being recommend (I think the first book Mark ever purchased on watch repair) ... so I ordered an old hardcover copy of fleabay.  I'll be reading that cover to cover to be sure.

 

As for old movements, do you have any recommendation on which is the best cal. and/or brand of movement to start practicing on?  I don't wanna try running before I've even crawl outta the crib :P  Cause from what I've researched so far, there are brands\cal, of movements that are a real bugger to work with (poor design and build, and other far better and much more forgiving to a novice like me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Guys,

 

Just introducing myself and giving you guys some background on how I came to this forum.

 

I've been in the IT Industry since 1992. Unfortunately, IT positions are rapidly being outsourced to places like India and Malaysia, and this will only increase exponentially in the next few years. 

 

My last position was made redundant after being employed by them for many years.  Even though I received high merits on my monthly reports; there simply was no positions being retained ... it all went overseas to Malaysia.  Because of my skills, I was one of the last people to be made redundant, and having to train foreign workers to replace my friends at work, and eventually myself, not only left a bad taste in my mouth, but was also a huge wake-up call that IT Tech Support is finished in my country.

 

So, I am dedicating myself to learn about watch repair in the hope of being indentured as a apprentice: and retrain into a new career path with a future.

 

I know it is a hard occupation to get into (especially at my age), but I'm a hard worker and determined to succeed.  I want to learn as much as possible to have an edge over other being interviewed for the few positions being offered.  I would appreciate information on study material that you guys recommend ... books and apprentice training course material that I can purchase to further my own personal advancement,  until I get that job offer.

If you are located in the US there are a few excellent two year watch schools here. Seattle Washington, Norman, Ok, and Lancaster, Pa have schools. You may check in to schools.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello Lawson and welcome. I was part of an in-house team for IT and Telecoms for 25 years but the job went bad when outsourcing started and the big names were tendering and eventually taking over all the mainframe administration. Then on site repairs ceased in favour of complete machine swap out. I decided to retire and have not looked back since. There is a lot of friendly help available here and heaven knows I have needed it. For me it is a hobby and I have restricted myself to two makes of watch but I would guess that you will not have that luxury. Good luck in your endeavours.

Vic

Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Lawson Ilike you am a beginner at this, to start off i just bought some cheap movemets from ebay just to get used to where everything comes from and goes back to.It takes a long time to get it right but hopefully with practice I and you will conquer it. I have also bought 2 books Repairing old Clocks & Watches by Anthony J Whiten and the other one recommended by the guys on this site is Practical Watch Repairing by Donald de Carle. Good luck

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

    • That is the reason why. I think it is better then have them all over the place. Regarding unmerged I can't see the sense. 
    • Date (day) CAN be moved without issues from the crown (position 1) but it CAN NOT be moved by rotating the crown (position 2), nor does it move in a normal 24hr. cycle. Clock functions otherwise withiut issues. Brand new Renata. Thanks, V.
    • Visually pocket watches suit some people. Having bigger parts to work with makes things a little easier to understand, the con to this is older timepieces that have been messed around with. Teachers recommend starting with something new and in good working order, this way if it doesn't run after you have serviced it then you are only looking for a fault that you created. That didn't suit me though because I'm quite mad with a little crazy mixed in 🤪
    • Got it thank you! I'll steer clear of the lower jewel count movements until my skills are a bit better. I'm literally brand new to this
    • Depends where you are with repairing, watches like you have just mentioned  the Smiths, Ingersolls, Services are often pin pallet watches with low jewel counts, not impossible to fix but often quite difficult due to having more wear than a fairly standard 15 or 17 jewel movement. Saying that you may be lucky and pick one up that was never used much. As an example i spent a few weeks on and off getting the most i could from an old Smiths Empire, that did actually finish at within 2 minutes per week that could be improved further now i know it is fairly precise but not quite accurate . Sekondas are good practice pieces at around a tenner, though some folk call them rough but robust.
×
×
  • Create New...