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Need Help Repairing a Seiko Chronograph M929-5000


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Hi there, I've noticed that mostly analogue watches are discussed on this forum so hopefully posting about a digital watch is okay.

I bought this M929 from a thrift store for $3 the other day in a non-working condition. After opening it for the first time, it was evident that a battery had leaked at some point - there was quite a bit of corrosive material everywhere. After giving it quite the clean using vinegar for the batteries crap and isopropyl alcohol for everything else, the backlight was again functioning, however, the LCD was not.

There appears to be some sort of potentiometer on the back of the main module, although this looks exactly the same as the screws that held in a back metal plate so I stupidly rotated it for a while before I realised it wasn't a screw. I've roughly rotated it back using a reference photo I took before I dismantled it (below) but the best I can get is a very dim set of numbers that flash and are only visible if directly under a light and viewed from an extreme angle - and even then, it does this randomly. I'm not sure if the pot is even for the LCD, though. I've also checked all the other components on the board with a multimeter and there seems to be continuity at least, although measuring the pot leads to no usable number of ohms.

Here's a bunch of photos I took. Hopefully, they can be helpful. Any help with the repair will be greatly appreciated.

 

Here is what the watch looked like on first opening. You can see green/blue muck everywhere.

4v2p39V.jpg  

Here you can see the extent of the corrosion on the buttons. This was even holding some of them in place. Vinegar made short work of it, however.

lArQw8r.jpg

A close up of the main module before disassembly. 

FD2kLee.jpg

The flipside of the module. Corrosion was bad here too

ISc9EGN.jpg

More disassembly and after cleaning

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Otherside. Note the pot at the bottom

fMNOgDc.jpg

LCD, reflector and contact transfer things

l2oHa9f.jpg

Close up of the LCD

0597dHN.jpg 

The plastic casing cleaned. There is still a bit of corrosion on those contacts but that is as much as I could remove.

WymXdee.jpg

The flipside

JCsxUs6.jpg

Reassembled after cleaning. Accidentally added some scratches from the screwdriver slipping, though. Whoops.

Aci1qkp.jpg

Flipside

lKUiRus.jpg

The corrosion had actually eaten into the watches metal. Luckily the buttons were fine after being cleaned.

GrsO7cl.jpg

The backlight.

v9q9Owg.jpg

 

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4 hours ago, brik1111 said:

 I've noticed that mostly analogue watches are discussed on this forum  

More exactly, mechanical watches. The reason is that unlike quartz and digital models, they can be repaired without replacing the complete movement.

 

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That is an old watch I would say mid 1970's but I have found this.
https://www.ebay.ie/itm/Seiko-Electric-Module-Circuit-4001-802-For-M929A-Watch-Movement/112690754735?hash=item1a3ce474af:g:oZYAAOSwry1aClHG

That adjustment screw you turned was fitted to the early quartz watch movments to fine tune their accuracy. I suspect the corrosion has damaged the circuitry and the above find might fix the problem !!!!! 

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What an awesome score for a few bucks! You need to have a look at the Seiko M929 Tech Guide. Hopefully this link will do the trick for you: https://goo.gl/zWrZbo

It goes through the checking procedure for these. Although in my experience you may well end up buying a new module for it anyway as per clockboys post.

Good luck with it!

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On 08/01/2018 at 4:49 PM, clockboy said:

That is an old watch I would say mid 1970's but I have found this.
https://www.ebay.ie/itm/Seiko-Electric-Module-Circuit-4001-802-For-M929A-Watch-Movement/112690754735?hash=item1a3ce474af:g:oZYAAOSwry1aClHG

That adjustment screw you turned was fitted to the early quartz watch movments to fine tune their accuracy. I suspect the corrosion has damaged the circuitry and the above find might fix the problem !!!!! 

Hopefully the corrosion hasn't completely cooked it but that looks like a great plan B - thanks for bringing it to my attention! Either way, I would be in front cost wise if eBay prices are to be believed. Also, any tips for fine tuning the accuracy? No doubt I've put it out of whack.

23 hours ago, Pip said:

What an awesome score for a few bucks! You need to have a look at the Seiko M929 Tech Guide. Hopefully this link will do the trick for you: https://goo.gl/zWrZbo

It goes through the checking procedure for these. Although in my experience you may well end up buying a new module for it anyway as per clockboys post.

Good luck with it!

Thanks for the link! Should help me a lot :)

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