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Watch of Today


mk3

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Today, in place of the Swatch Irony that has been acting as buddy to check the accuracy of the 1967 Timex Viscount, I'm wearing another "freebie", that was in a listing which stated "Watch, Watch Parts, Watch Strap, Watch Tool" and included the Lorus, a ladies Timex, six brand new leather straps, and a watch holder, amongst other stuff.

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The whole lot fell within the magic 404 budget, and the Lorus certainly cleaned up nicely. A full scrub and polish, a new battery and off it went. It is almost perfect, other than a few scratches on the case back.

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Luch is made in belaruss, I got this in moscow where obviously it retails for more. I think the price was about seven dollars back then( sixteen years ago) also got ten manual winds in minsk for five dollars a piece. 

Day/ date  jumps real good and feels like you would expect from an expensive brand, low quality glass, and the chrome is decent quality.

IMG-20190402-WA0000.jpg

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1 minute ago, ricardopalamino said:

I'm sure you're right , but why not wear it on the right wrist ?

I asked on a post once either here or another forum about which wrist members wore their watch on , and the consensus   , if I remember correctly was that right handers wore their watch on their left wrist and visa versa for the left handers . 

This was not a scientific study so you don't have to nominate me for the Nobel Peace Prize ,...if you don't want to . 

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26 minutes ago, ricardopalamino said:

I asked on a post once either here or another forum about which wrist members wore their watch on , and the consensus   , if I remember correctly was that right handers wore their watch on their left wrist and visa versa for the left handers . 

This was not a scientific study so you don't have to nominate me for the Nobel Peace Prize ,...if you don't want to . 

 R-handed wear watches on the left, and L-handed wear watches on the right. 

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21 minutes ago, ro63rto said:

I'm right-handed and wear my watches on the left.
Bothers me if I try it on the right wrist as it gets in the way when I write.

For what little it may be worth, if I'm testing a watch, I put the test watch on the left and the known, good watch on the right.
Normally (I'm right handed), I'll have my watch on the left wrist.
If I'm doing anything that involves electricity, I'll have the watch in my pocket, or not be wearing one.

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3 hours ago, ricardopalamino said:

O K , but I still don't understand why you said that ro63rto's Seiko Chrono wasn't made to be worn on the right hand . 

 

No, I was merely confirming what he said about the left hand crown at 8' being normal for Seiko 7a28 & 7a38 models. I would indeed assume it was made to be worn on the right hand!

J

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Today, I'm sporting the latest "fixer-upper" from the 404 club. This is a Newmark "Aviation" from around 1950. A bit of digging around online suggests it might be slightly earlier, as later versions apparently had Newmark stamped on the movement, and this one doesn't. 

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I doubt if it is WWII era, though it does have that vibe,  since I think the company only started up just after the war, but information about them is a little thin on the ground.

The crystal is a huge improvement on the condition it arrived in, but still has some pretty deep scratches.

It beats at a rather languid but loud 17280 bph, a rate which the tg-timer software is not aware of, so I had to download the source and re-compile it. 

In the unlikely event that anyone else wants to do this, here is the diff between the online source and my modified version.

Quote

diff --git a/src/tg.h b/src/tg.h
index ab86ce6..0951770 100644
--- a/src/tg.h
+++ b/src/tg.h
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@
 #define MIN_CAL -1000 // 0.1 s/d
 #define MAX_CAL 1000 // 0.1 s/d
 
-#define PRESET_BPH { 12000, 14400, 18000, 19800, 21600, 25200, 28800, 36000, 43200, 72000, 0 };
+#define PRESET_BPH { 12000, 14400, 17280, 18000, 19800, 21600, 25200, 28800, 36000, 43200, 72000, 0 };
 
 #ifdef DEBUG
 #define debug(...) print_debug(__VA_ARGS__)

 

This watch, like may others was dead on arrival, but after a good "wash and brush up", a little light rust removal, and a little lubrication, it is now working pretty well.

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It is sporting a period correct NOS leather band that also received a little cosmetic treatment and some leather rejuvenation therapy.

The beat error appears high, but bear in mind that is a beat error of 5.8ms out of a very slow beat  of around 0.20  seconds, so as a percentage, it is relatively low. The swing however is enormous.

Edited by AndyHull
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43 minutes ago, AndyHull said:

Today, I'm sporting the latest "fixer-upper" from the 404 club. This is a Newmark "Aviation" from around 1950. A bit of digging around online suggests it might be slightly earlier, as later versions apparently had Newmark stamped on the movement, and this one doesn't. 

RIMG0674.thumb.JPG.a54e016ced6628977d65ad3a24d00d07.JPG

I doubt if it is WWII era, though it does have that vibe,  since I think the company only started up just after the war, but information about them is a little thin on the ground.

The crystal is a huge improvement on the condition it arrived in, but still has some pretty deep scratches.

It beats at a rather languid but loud 17280 bph, a rate which the tg-timer software is not aware of, so I had to download the source and re-compile it. 

In the unlikely event that anyone else wants to do this, here is the diff between the online source and my modified version.

This watch, like may others was dead on arrival, but after a good "wash and brush up", a little light rust removal, and a little lubrication, it is now working pretty well.

2057912454_Screenshotat2019-04-0910-32-29.png.4025c8a35c99603570729c1160187a51.png

It is sporting a period correct NOS leather band that also received a little cosmetic treatment and some leather rejuvenation therapy.

The beat error appears high, but bear in mind that is a beat error of 5.8ms out of a very slow beat  of around 0.20  seconds, so as a percentage, it is relatively low. The swing however is enormous.

Cute , How about the movement, looks? caliber?  I guess it is collectible?

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The movement looks to be based on the Baumgartner 677 series, with no shock protection to speak of, and what someone described as a "rather agricultural rate" of 17280 bph - I have no idea about the lift angle, so I estimated at 52 degrees, which will be in the right ball park.

It arrived with the minute hand rattling about under the crystal and suffering from damp ingress, probably condensation rather than a dip in the sea. Its construction is pretty basic, so there is no dust or water protection to speak of.

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This is a picture after the first cleanup and removal of most of the rust on the screws and winding gears. I dived in a little deeper after this. There are no jewels to worry about, so it got a liberal dousing of kerosene and the pinion "bushings" got a poke with some nylon toothbrush bristles. 

They are collectible, but I doubt if there is any significant value in it. Unscrupulous sellers sometimes advertise them as WWII pilot watches or even trench watches, but they are neither. The factory was based in Croydon, and manufactured these from just after the second world war to the early 1960s. I believe they also sold other brands like Avia, and later Swatch. The company name, like a lot of others seems to have risen phoenix like from the ashes at least once, and a "Newmark" produced some much more recent watches. I'm not sure what the connection between the recent offerings and the original Newmark company is, if any.

These watches were low end, and pretty popular. Similar to Smiths, Timex, Westclocks and the like. One more thing, if you like your watches to tick comfortingly loud, then this is the watch for you. I was surprised how accurate it still appears to be after nearly seventy years. Not bad for a bit of "agricultural machinery". :P

Edited by AndyHull
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There's a charm about the loud tick of a pin pallet escapement.

20 minutes ago, AndyHull said:

 

These watches were low end, and pretty popular. Similar to Smiths, Timex, Westclocks and the like. One more thing, if you like your watches to tick comfortingly loud, then this is the watch for you. I was surprised how accurate it still appears to be after nearly seventy years. Not bad for a bit of "agricultural machinery". :P

 

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Todays. First new watch bought solely on appearance in a while.

Vostok komandirskie. Nothing says RUSSIAN like a big red watch.

(I do have a Helgray coming, kickstarter micro brand, which technically I bought before this but it's not due for another month)

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22 minutes ago, Nucejoe said:

Out of the drawer now for stem removal, will ask for advice in proper sub-forum. Watch out, it is passed as genuine on ebay. It is not.

Got a miyota movement, watch looks clean if you don,t mind wiping everyday.IMG-20190409-WA0005.thumb.jpg.d73830fedc5f7388b98857a685355a85.jpg 

If not genuine, do all of the sub dials work?

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