Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I have an Omega 1010 which has a cente wheel + cannon pinion as one piece.

It was just about seized, but after cleaning and 'exercising' it a bit, it's now too loose.

Is the adjustment the same as a normal cannon pinion - using the staking set to put a nick on the side?

I've never had to do this, and I'm a bit worried as the wall of the pinion looks thick.

1722519534790.jpg

Posted
16 hours ago, mikepilk said:

I have an Omega 1010 which has a cente wheel + cannon pinion as one piece.

It was just about seized, but after cleaning and 'exercising' it a bit, it's now too loose.

Is the adjustment the same as a normal cannon pinion - using the staking set to put a nick on the side?

I've never had to do this, and I'm a bit worried as the wall of the pinion looks thick.

1722519534790.jpg

Check with @noirrac1j i think he is the master of Omega 1010 and similar :) 

And if i remember correctly the wall is not very that thick?The inner pivot is a little larger to? But it's very tricky to get the right amount of slippage?

Posted

Hi Mike,

I believe that on this models the canon pinion needs to be more on the loose side rather than too tight. When setting time they 'feel' like there's no friction in the canon pinion but it works fine.

You may want to re-assemble it as is and see how it works before proceeding to tighten it up.

Anilv

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
14 hours ago, anilv said:

Hi Mike,

I believe that on this models the canon pinion needs to be more on the loose side rather than too tight. When setting time they 'feel' like there's no friction in the canon pinion but it works fine.

You may want to re-assemble it as is and see how it works before proceeding to tighten it up.

Anilv

I think it needs a bit of tightening. The figures on the timing machine looked good, and after wearing it for half a day, the second hand was where it should be, but I'd lost 2 minutes from the minute hand. 

Edited by mikepilk
  • Like 1
Posted

Hi Mike.

That may show a problem with the canon pinion. But if it consistently shows a two minute loss then you need to look deeper.

Try hitting the watch edge on with your hand. Does the minute hand move? 

Also a loose minute hand will show similar symptoms.. Anilvlv

 

Posted
17 hours ago, anilv said:

Hi Mike.

That may show a problem with the canon pinion. But if it consistently shows a two minute loss then you need to look deeper.

Try hitting the watch edge on with your hand. Does the minute hand move? 

Also a loose minute hand will show similar symptoms.. Anilvlv

 

The minute hand is a bit loose, but the cannon pinion does feel very loose too.

I'm hoping @noirrac1j can give me some guidance as to how it should be

Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, mikepilk said:

The minute hand is a bit loose, but the cannon pinion does feel very loose too.

I'm hoping @noirrac1j can give me some guidance as to how it should be

Hello @mikepilk!

Trouble with Omega cannon pinions are among the most frustrating things I've dealt with. Just have a few questions before I give suggestions:

1) You said the cannon pinion was seized: Was it from a movement that showed signs of water damage? I am guessing you loosened it mechanically after soaking or something? 

2) The watch hands: Are they original to the watch (as fas as you know), and does the minute hand sit snugly on the minute wheel shaft or is there some play?

3) If you observe the watch (faceup on a table) carefully throughout an hour, is there a specific point at which it loses time consistently? example: runs fine but loses time after 3:15, and if reset immediately upon noticing time loss, will keep time until 4:15 and lose time again.

 

Ok I am just going to assume it is the cannon pinion because you said it was seized and now it isn't, but @anilv has a point about the minute hand. If the problem is there the time loss will occur erratically and not at specific times. Through lots of trial and error, I will suggest he following if you want to try to tighten this Omega 1010 cannon pinion. Oh yeah, did you look up the cost of a replacement? I can give you the info of a material house that carries it for about 50 dollars....just as reference!

You'll need a cannon pinion tightening tool 20170303_143040.thumb.jpg.9a24fc6b594398574c2519e0242efd40.jpg

so that you can place a small diameter broaching pin or some other suitable thin object though the cannon pinion tube to prevent it from crushing it beyond repair. 20170303_143206.thumb.jpg.d13eba867bd6faa767b384368d12d0e8.jpg

. and give it a gentle tap just as with a staking set. If you don't have this tool, then give a very gentle tap and test each time you do so to minimize overtightening.

J

Edited by noirrac1j
Posted

Thanks for the comprehensive reply @noirrac1j

The movement had water damage, I ended up changing a lot of parts.

The cannon pinion was very stiff until I cleaned it and moved it manually. Now I can feel very little resistance.

 I guess some material has been lost as rust.

The minute hand was quite loose - I tightened it up today. I'll try that before messing with the cannon pinnion.

BTW this is the same watch you kindly offered me the date change wheel for.

I ended up buying a new dial from India for about $30. They're sold on ebay as 'repainted'. I have to say that they look amazing - hard to tell from an original.

omega.jpg

Posted (edited)

That dial does indeed look very very good, as the does entire watch. Is that band also Omega? Its great!

Getting back to the cannon pinion--If rust is the problem, and it sounds like it was, then that would have dissolved some of the inner surface. When you worked it loosed, that caused oxidized metal to just wash away and that caused the problem. I would suggest you replace it, but If you want to try to fix the cannon pinion as an exercise that's fine too. I went through the same problem with a different part in this watch:DSCN5080.thumb.jpg.e9d35253a89de52c76120c42c035709b.jpg

and in the end, the part did have to be replaced with new at almost the price I paid for the entire non-working watch. It was still a great bargain, but you already know the deal with Omega parts. If you can buy the part new that's your best bet, if  a donor watch or a used replacement is available at a good price I'd grab it.  Let me know if you have trouble finding that cannon pinion, I'll give the info on that material house that has it.

J

 

Edited by noirrac1j
Posted

I think I might have actually fixed it. I'll wear it tomorrow for a final test.

It appears that getting the cannon pinion friction correct is critical on this movement. So much so that  "omega say to replace the cannon pinion rather than service it, you were not even suppose to put it through a cleaner but use rodico to clean it".

Surprisingly the cannon pinion was both too tight, and too loose ! 

Let me explain - The minute hand was losing a minute or two due to looseness of the cannon pinion. But also when setting the hands, the intermediate wheel would slip in some positions due to too much friction.

I did some research and found that it's easy to remove the cannon pinion :  "Place the cannon pinion flat on the bench, a strong pair of tweezers with the jaws placed placed either side of the pinion teeth on the flat wheel, hold this firmly then with tweezers grip the cannon pinion and pull it straight up".

I could see some rust which was causing it to stick in some places, and be too loose in others. Once cleaned and lubricated, all seems OK. The pinion moves smoothly but with a slight friction. The hands set nicely, and (so far) move correctly.

I agree with comments that this is not Omegas finest movement - less robust than previous models, especially on the dial side. I have a Cal 565 which seems much more sturdy.

Posted
6 hours ago, mikepilk said:

I think I might have actually fixed it. I'll wear it tomorrow for a final test.

It appears that getting the cannon pinion friction correct is critical on this movement. So much so that  "omega say to replace the cannon pinion rather than service it, you were not even suppose to put it through a cleaner but use rodico to clean it".

Surprisingly the cannon pinion was both too tight, and too loose ! 

Let me explain - The minute hand was losing a minute or two due to looseness of the cannon pinion. But also when setting the hands, the intermediate wheel would slip in some positions due to too much friction.

I did some research and found that it's easy to remove the cannon pinion :  "Place the cannon pinion flat on the bench, a strong pair of tweezers with the jaws placed placed either side of the pinion teeth on the flat wheel, hold this firmly then with tweezers grip the cannon pinion and pull it straight up".

I could see some rust which was causing it to stick in some places, and be too loose in others. Once cleaned and lubricated, all seems OK. The pinion moves smoothly but with a slight friction. The hands set nicely, and (so far) move correctly.

I agree with comments that this is not Omegas finest movement - less robust than previous models, especially on the dial side. I have a Cal 565 which seems much more sturdy.

A+ my man! I looked this part up on two material houses' websites and did not see a separate number for the cannon pinion so I thought it was indeed a one-piece unit. You're correct that on Omega's 10xx movements the tightness of the cannon pinion is crucial. I've worked on the 1020 and 1022, etc. and they can be fidgety. Once its running properly,  it will be a good timekeeper.

J

Posted

You are right, the Cannon pinion and wheel are sold as a one piece unit, part #1219. 

The important lesson I've learned is how crucial a properly tensioned pinion is, and how easy it is to take apart and clean. With  any further 10?? movements I'll definitely be taking the cannon pinion off for a clean and lube 

  • Like 1
  • 7 years later...
Posted

Following up on how to pull apart thr cannon pinion part # 1020-1219. I have discovered that an old mainspring barrel cover will fit perfectly over the cannon pinion and allow for its easy removal. You'll still need a cannon pinion remover, but theres no risk with bending the center wheel. The pics show a new cannon pinion which I pulled apart to lubricate-- too.much friction.

20240909_191458.jpg

20240909_191513.jpg

20240909_191609.jpg

  • Like 3
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • it would be nice to have the exact model of the watch the or a picture so we can see exactly what you're talking about. this is because the definition of Swiss watch could be a variety of things and it be helpful if we could see exactly the watch your dealing with then in professional watch repair at least some professionals they do pre-cleaned watches. In other words the hands and dial come off and the entire movement assembled goes through a cleaning machine sometimes I think a shorter bath perhaps so everything is nice and clean for disassembly makes it easier to look for problems. Then other professionals don't like pre-cleaning because it basically obliterates the scene of the crime. Especially when dealing with vintage watches where you're looking for metal filings and problems that may visually go away with cleaning. Then usually super sticky lubrication isn't really a problem for disassembly and typically shouldn't be a problem on a pallet fork bridge because there shouldn't be any lubrication on the bridge at all as you typically do not oil the pallet fork pivots.  
    • A few things you should find out before you can mske a decision of what to do. As Richard said, what is the crown and all of the crown components made of . Then also the stem .  The crown looks to have a steel washer that retains a gasket. So be careful with what chemicals you use to dissolve any stem adhesives or the use of heat. You might swell or melt the gasket unless you are prepared to change that also . The steel washer maybe reactive to alum. Something I've just used to dissolve a broken screw from a plate. First drilled out the centre of the screw with a 0.5mm carbide . Dipped only the section that held the broken screw in Rustins rust remover. This is 40 % phosphoric acid. 3 days and the screw remains were completely dissolved, no trace of steel in the brass threads. A black puddle left in the solution.
    • I suppose this will add to the confusion I have a roller jewel assortment. It lists out American pocket watches for Elgin 18 size and even 16 size it's a 50. But not all the various companies used 50-50 does seem to be common one company had a 51 and the smallest is 43. American parts are always interesting? Francis Elgin for mainsprings will tell you the thickness of the spring other companies will not even though the spring for the same number could come in a variety of thicknesses. But if we actually had the model number of your watch we would find it probably makes a reference that the roller jewel came in different dimensions. So overlook the parts book we find that? So it appears to be 18 and 16 size would be the same sort of the arson different catalog numbers and as I said we don't have your Mongol know which Log number were supposed to be using. Variety of materials garnered her sapphire single or double but zero mention about diameters. Then in a section of rollers in this case rollers with jewels we do get this down in the notes section Roller specifications but of course zero reference to the jewel size. I was really hoping the roller jewel assortment would give us sizes it doesn't really. But it does show a picture of how one particular roller jewel gauge is used  
    • Seems to still do it through my mobile data, I use an android phone almost exclusively, but I'll double check it. Thanks mark Strange, I'll try my laptop that utilities edge. I've been on site half hour since I got home, it hasn't done it yet. Thanks John
    • At work, I'm on MS Edge, not through chose, on my phone, chrome, no issues with either. 
×
×
  • Create New...