Jump to content

Sicura Bfg 866


Recommended Posts

 

Yes believe me nothing is more serious thank sitting at my desk at 11:45pm and having the TINIEST screw I've ever seen fall onto my work area and catapult into oblivion.

Oh, yeah, I forgot, and Welcome To The Club! You know, finding parts! Part of the hobby! I bet it doesn't keep us on our...toes?! By the way, both watches are very nice. Congratulations on a great start!

 

We have a section listing suppliers from all over, so feel free to check them all out or contribute with new ones.

 

A mat is very helpful but sometimes it is not enough, good tweezers -- and well maintained -- are your first line of defense against running away parts.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome to the forum noirrac1j. Yes it doesn't matter if the watch is expensive, cheap, simple or complicated they all have little bits that want to fly off into oblivion. My solution is to come to terms with the fact that it is going to happen sometimes and there is nothing to do but get on your hands and knees and beg your wife to find it for you because it is the most important bit of the watch. (:-))

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey Vich, you are really lucky. My wife can't stand watching me working on the little bits of a watch. It gets on her nerves. She gets so stressed with the minute work that she  leaves and goes shopping (Thanks God it is with her money)! I still got my kids to help look...when they are around. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey fellas thanks for the warm welcome. Yes I had a tiny screw fly out into the wild recesses of my old wood floor and spent an hour with wet bounty paper towels in a futile attempt to find them (yes TWO). I found one. What I wound up doing was ordering four extras at $8.00 each.

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

    • Drilling is going to be difficult, firstly because the drill bits are so thin and brittle, expect to break a few. The second issue is access to the 'hole', as the other lug will be in the way, meaning that you will have to drill at a slight angle, putting a bending stress on the drill bit and with the slightest drop in concentration .... and back to my first point. I would be tempted to grind them flat with a Dremel type tool or small jewelers file, and then put a center punch in the center of the bit to be drilled so the drill bit doesn't skip around and break... but expect this to be slow and frustrating work. By the time you have done 4 of these you'll be an expert and can come back and tell us all the best way to do it if you go down this route. However, I would seriously consider What @watchweasol said and drill from the outside-in, this will ensure straight holes without having to work around the other lugs. It may be worthwhile making yourself a simple paper template so you can be sure to match the position of each hole before drilling. In the end you will be left with 4 holes on the outside of the lugs, but many cases are made this way and unless you are looking for it you probably won't notice or realise that it's not the way the watch was meant to be in the first place.
    • What works for me (waiting for the villagers to assemble with torches and pitchforks) is to put a liberal (in watch terms) spot of 9010 on one of the pins of the pin pallet, this seems to improve amplitude and beat error.
    • Non-magnetic is a poor description of such a hairspring. A better description would be unmagnetisable hairspring. There are metals and alloys that are attracted to magnets, but don’t become magnetised themselves. A hairspring made out such a material will be attracted to magnetised tweezers, but will not become magnetised. These hairsprings can be disrupted by being in close proximity to a magnet, but the disruption will cease the moment the magnet is moved away. These are hairsprings that could conceivably be disrupted by a magnetised hairspring stud. Best Regards, Mark
    • More than enough. Here's mine at the height I work at. I think the working distance with the included 0.5x Barlow lens is about 9".   So yes, that halves the magnification. The full story is the objective lens goes from 0.7x to 4.5x. The eyepieces are 10x, giving you the advertised magnification of 7x-45x. However the working distance is unacceptably short, so it comes with an 0.5x Barlow lens, reducing the magnification range to 3.5x-22.5x, but giving you a good working distance. What I did was buy a pair of Extreme Widefield 20x Eyepieces for when I need more magnification. You keep your high working distance, but get your 45x magnification back, at the cost of some width of field.
    • Modern ones after blue steel, invar, elinvar and nivarox , the shiny one are not supposed to become magnetised. But i have had them jump to tweezers. And i dont really understand the comment that what can be magnetised is the stud carrier and rate regulator and they can attract the hairspring ? If the hairspring is non magnetic then how can it be attracted to something else thats become magnetise, its non magnetic , that doesn't really make sense to be ?
×
×
  • Create New...