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Watch of Today


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The Slava 2414 twin barrel got a bath today. From stone dead and fully wound, to >260 degrees and around -30s/day currently.

RIMG0643.thumb.JPG.eccd6efef7794e19a532883cfd371af8.JPG

I'll let it settle overnight and do the final regulate, adjust and tidy up any remaining fine scratches on the crystal tomorrow.
An interesting movement. One thing worthy of note is this comment on ranfft.de

Quote

Attention! Never, never ever unlock the stem unless you have pulled the crown to setting position. And never insert the stem without pushing the release button, even not if the collar towards the square is conical to lift the set lever. Else you have a high chance to mix up the parts of the setting works, and rearranging them is much more troublesome than in most other movements.

The keyless work is a little fiddly, but not that bad, but in my opinion you are more likely to encounter flying spring action from the date disk than anything else when stripping and cleaning.

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34mm German-made Anker today. Unhappily, I haven’t yet established which of several Mikrolisk possibles made this particular watch, and probably never will.

Its unlovely 21j movement is a French-made Lorsa 655G.3 and whilst the unidentified anti-shock has every appearance of having been cobbled together in someone’s garden shed, the same device was also used in some of the other 65x examples shown in the good Dr R’s archive.

Regards.

Anker 21j 2019 v.2.jpg

Anker 21j Lorsa 655G.3 v.2.jpg

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Does a brass desk clock count as Watch of Today?

Well this one kind of does, since it is actually a Seiko quartz watch movement, complete with stem and crown.

RIMG0657.thumb.JPG.54dd4d8adcb3a3d840f2122e6e485727.JPG

The "watch" part is held in to the body with a silicone band which allows it to press fit into a recess on the very heavy brass body. 

The whole thing is about 4" high and surprisingly heavy, and no doubt cost a pretty penny when new.

Needless to say, it is yet another member of the 404 club.

Don't forget to put the clocks/watches back tonight if you live in the UK.

Edited by AndyHull
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This time, its a "real" watch for Watch of today, sort of.

RIMG0665.thumb.JPG.c005f93c2c9f207017f5363550f7b7a1.JPG

You may have noticed that I have a fascination for the more quirky stuff.

Strange types of movements, Communist dictators with bad tobacco habits, sausages, tennis playing beagles.. that sort of thing.

Well today's , quirk is plastic. Lots of plastic. Blue acrylic and off white PVC to be precise.

RIMG0659.thumb.JPG.716bfdd39d3801038532458439989ecd.JPG

This is a Basis  "Lucerne" watch.  Pprobably, judging by the bizarre design,this is from round about the same time as the first of the Jelly Fish Swatch watches, so around 1983 give or take a few years.

It is a One Jewel Wonder, with the dial held in place by the crystal which in turn is held in place by a metal retaining ring. No dial feet here, so the positioning of the dial is a little hit or miss. 

RIMG0660.thumb.JPG.822c86b42e55e0aab0077a252aea2021.JPG

There is no obvious way in to the watch, and the stem release, while visible  through the rear acrylic is not accessible, therefore you have to attack it from the front, so I grabbed a large lump of blue-tak, jammed it on the crystal and pulled, with dramatic effect. The crystal, crystal ring, dial and hands all parted company from the watch, reveling the gummed up mechanism beneath. 

The crown and stem was extracted by backing off the screw holding the keyless work down, and gently lifting the retaining tab with a sewing needle. This then permitted extraction of the mechanism, which I then tore apart and cleaned.

RIMG0661.thumb.JPG.6d40dd74c33aebc8195958e082e3f999.JPG

The only remaining issue is that if I want to do any further adjusting or regulating, I need to repeat the above rigmarole, however since the thing has presumably never been looked at from the moment it left the factory, it may well be another  thirty years or more before anyone else has to figure this out. 

Having said that, I will strip it back down again tomorrow assuming it runs for the next 24hrs without any major issues. I have the beat error, and the rate sorted out, but the amplitude is still a little low but I'm hopeful it will pick up a bit as the lubrication gets to work on all of those long neglected pinions

Edited by AndyHull
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On 10/26/2019 at 7:36 PM, AndyHull said:

Does a brass desk clock count as Watch of Today?

Well this one kind of does, since it is actually a Seiko quartz watch movement, complete with stem and crown.

RIMG0657.thumb.JPG.54dd4d8adcb3a3d840f2122e6e485727.JPG

The "watch" part is held in to the body with a silicone band which allows it to press fit into a recess on the very heavy brass body. 

The whole thing is about 4" high and surprisingly heavy, and no doubt cost a pretty penny when new.

Needless to say, it is yet another member of the 404 club.

Don't forget to put the clocks/watches back tonight if you live in the UK.

I don't  know...take it off the stand...put a strap on it...add a few rhinestones..and it would look perfectly  at home at the Walmart  watch counter. 

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On 10/27/2019 at 4:51 PM, AndyHull said:

This time, its a "real" watch for Watch of today, sort of.

RIMG0665.thumb.JPG.c005f93c2c9f207017f5363550f7b7a1.JPG

You may have noticed that I have a fascination for the more quirky stuff 

Strange types of movements, Communist dictators with bad tobacco habits, sausages, tennis playing beagles.. that sort of thing.

Well today's , quirk is plastic. Lots of plastic. Blue acrylic and off white PVC to be precise.

RIMG0659.thumb.JPG.716bfdd39d3801038532458439989ecd.JPG

This is a Basis  "Lucerne" watch.  Pprobably, judging by the bizarre design,this is from round about the same time as the first of the Jelly Fish Swatch watches, so around 1983 give or take a few years.

It is a One Jewel Wonder, with the dial held in place by the crystal which in turn is held in place by a metal retaining ring. No dial feet here, so the positioning of the dial is a little hit or miss. 

RIMG0660.thumb.JPG.822c86b42e55e0aab0077a252aea2021.JPG

There is no obvious way in to the watch, and the stem release, while visible  through the rear acrylic is not accessible, therefore you have to attack it from the front, so I grabbed a large lump of blue-tak, jammed it on the crystal and pulled, with dramatic effect. The crystal, crystal ring, dial and hands all parted company from the watch, reveling the gummed up mechanism beneath. 

The crown and stem was extracted by backing off the screw holding the keyless work down, and gently lifting the retaining tab with a sewing needle. This then permitted extraction of the mechanism, which I then tore apart and cleaned.

RIMG0661.thumb.JPG.6d40dd74c33aebc8195958e082e3f999.JPG

The only remaining issue is that if I want to do any further adjusting or regulating, I need to repeat the above rigmarole, however since the thing has presumably never been looked at from the moment it left the factory, it may well be another  thirty years or more before anyone else has to figure this out. 

Having said that, I will strip it back down again tomorrow assuming it runs for the next 24hrs without any major issues. I have the beat error, and the rate sorted out, but the amplitude is still a little low but I'm hopeful it will pick up a bit as the lubrication gets to work on all of those long neglected pinions

Quirky? Now that you mention  it....

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Tara alarm, cheap ebay watch, (I like alarm  watches ever since I picked up a Poljot).

Ronda 17 jewel movement which is a bit of an oddity in that, unlike the Poljot all the alarm functions including the separate mainspring are on the dial side. 

Just finished a clean, rebuild and oiling. 

Missing a seconds hand. 

1572395432108-619498707.jpg

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Today, this all-steel 218D hummer from 1965.

You all know the outline of how these things work  -  vibrations of its tuning fork are converted into rotary motion by the 2.4mm diameter index wheel with its 320 microscopic teeth (each 0.01mm high and 0.02mm wide) cut round the circumference and once considered by Robert Berkavicius to have been “the most technically difficult and highest precision watch part ever made”.

It’s also said that the machinery on which these wheels were made was deliberately destroyed by the company which eventually purchased Bulova (you know who you are) and that, even nearly 60 years on, the engineering behind their manufacture is either lost or remains a secret.

Regards.

Accutron s.s. 2019 2 v.2.jpg

Accutron s.s. 218D 2019 v.2.jpg

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Any sensible designer has to call it a bad idea. I don,t believe the technology had any military use ether. Which is always a force behind anything with remote chance of  use in so called defence.

Repair is a pain making repairman run away. Good percentage don,t keep time especially if repaired. Perfect as a museum piece.

I have got couple omega 720 megasonic, have had limited success selling parts off of em. 

I like the humming sound.

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1 hour ago, balaton said:

vibrations of its tuning fork are converted into rotary motion by the 2.4mm diameter index wheel with its 320 microscopic teeth (each 0.01mm high and 0.02mm wide) cut round the circumference and once considered by Robert Berkavicius to have been “the most technically difficult and highest precision watch part ever made”.

Interestingly, it would now theoretically be possible to 3D print objects with sub 10 micron resolution, so if you know anyone with a high end 3D  printer, then you might be able to fabricate these disks. If my recent experience of examining quartz chronographs is anything to go by, you may even be able to fabricate them in nylon or other similar polymers, rather than metal.

Furthermore high quality laser cutters can in theory cut to sub 1/1200 of an inch (0.0021166582mm) so if there is a market for these spares, and you can find some way to fabricate them, then you may be able to produce and sell them.

Edited by AndyHull
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    • Unfortunately I'm not that lucky. I started on the train side and after I noticed the binding I pulled everything out except the driving wheel to rule everything else out. It still binds. I'm going to double check that the pinion is fully seated on the staff first, then if no joy I'll push the bridge jewel up a fraction of a mm. Fingers crossed!
    • Happy to have helped, great way to start the day with a win! 🥳
    • Thank you for the advise!! It worked. The setting screw was a lock/unlock to remove the rotor. 
    • I have that French tech sheet too, it is a little different than the English one (eg, it doesn't have the auto works diagram). BTW, it looks like you are looking up the case number in the 1979 ABC supplement. The 1974 ABC catalog does have the 3093 case. As you determined it takes the 1222-5 crystal.  When I serviced my President 'A' (which also takes that crystal), I was able to fit a 29.8 crystal from my DPA crystal assortment. Those are, in my opinion, a great deal. The assortment comes with 10 sizes each from 27.8mm to 32.4mm in 0.2 increments. I pretty much use them for any non-armored crystal that takes a high dome crystal. I think they no longer make them but Cousins has still has some in stock but when I bought them they were around $40 for the set and now they are around $100. Still, at 40 cents a crystal it's still a good deal. For the large driving wheel, I remember I once assembled the keyless/motion works first and when I placed the large driving wheel it was interfering with the setting wheel on the dial side as the teeth were not fully meshing and it wouldn't fully seat. If that isn't the issue I got nothing and am looking forward to see how you solve it 🙂
    • Not sure, but just looking at it, it seems like the screw on the right may be a fake? The one on the left may not be a screw in the regular sense at all, rather a 2 position device, I think you need to point the slot towards either of the 2 dots and one will secure and one will open. Like I said this is just my best guess looking at the pictures.
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