Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

A good set of watch screwdrivers is necessary. The better quality ones help you in your work they are easy to work with. If your budget is high get a set of Bergeon or Horotec.I have mentioned Horotec as many members on here use them and say they are very good. With care, they last a lifetime. I still have my Bergeon set from the 70’s there as good now as the day I bought them.

  • Like 1
Posted

Unless you envision yourself using your screwdrivers multiple hours daily, then yours are fine. The part that does the real work is the blade and you're correct to zero in on improving the quality of your screwdrivers from the working end. I went the same route, btw. A new set of Bergeon or Horotec professional screwdrivers cost way more than my first automobile. As a hobbyist, there were some compromises to be made in the area of tools.

I'm including a link to Bergeon replaceable tips. They're likely available from any watchmaker tool supplier. I simply purchased the best tips available and inserted them into my own screwdriver set. The improvement was immediate and dramatic.

http://www.ofrei.com/page239.html

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Hi Everyone

I am looking for my first set of screwdrivers and was browsing the Otto Frei website. I was looking up the Horotec's with ball bearings and came across a generic version.

Otto Frei description says, "These are the finest French made precision Screwdrivers. Set of 9 polished chromed brass screwdrivers with color coded rotating hexagon heads mounted on ball bearings(Base also rotates)." I was skeptical of the claim to be the finest because there is no mention of any brand and they're way less expensive at $56.95 than the Horotec set of 12 which go for $349. So I contacted a rep from Otto Frei and asked how they compared to the Horotecs. He said they were very similar in quality, but are less expensive because they are not sourced out of Switzerland like Horotec.

I was a bit shocked and still a bit skeptical. What do you guys think? Do you have experience with these particular drivers? The SKU is SCR-980.00

Here's the link: http://www.ofrei.com/page1362.html#30046

Posted

Hi  When you buy Bergeon you buy quality at a price, The french ones are ok . I believe I read some where Bergeon dont manufacture anything, some one else does the manufacture. I have screwdrivers I got 60 years ago and are bog standard nothing fancy and they still work ok  the knack looking after them.  the best tools do not make the best workman, good tools in the hands of an idiot are not much good but its not the tools fault. Buy the best you can afford at this time and maybe up grade as time progresses and as your skill level increases. add the tools as you go.  Cousins UK sell some under the A*F brand and they are ok .  all the best.

  • Like 3
Posted

For what it's worth. I have only bought Bergeon screwdrivers that was back in the 70's and I still have them, they work just as fine today, I'm retired and don't use them very much, apart from tightening the screws on my glasses. I always thought Bergeon charge way to much for all there tools. Sorry I can't be more helpful.  

  • Like 1
Posted

These are made in the Jura, too. However on the French side, few kilometers apart from Le Locle (Bergeon). I use them for years, quality is ok. 

Frank

  • Like 1
Posted

Years ago when I started in the watch repair hobby Dumont tweezers and Bergeon tools were the norm and the prices were not that bad but as the market has opened up the prices rose  and to day they are the most expensive, Others copied them but never beat them but the copies are now very good. Just like fake watches, years ago you could tell a fake from 10 yards now you have to examine them closely. But I think the tools are way better now.

  • Like 1
Posted

This has been discussed already recently, so it's always good to do a little searching.

Affordable unbranded A*F (France) drivers
Individual: https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/cousins-swiss-style-stainless-steel
Set: https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/cousins-swiss-style-stainless-steel-9-pieces-rs

Answer from Sam Cousins when asked about:
they are replaced by the Cousins Swiss style equivalents, which are the exact same screwdrivers

  • Thanks 1
Posted
30 minutes ago, watchweasol said:

Years ago when I started in the watch repair hobby Dumont tweezers and Bergeon tools were the norm and the prices were not that bad but as the market has opened up the prices rose  and to day they are the most expensive, Others copied them but never beat them but the copies are now very good. Just like fake watches, years ago you could tell a fake from 10 yards now you have to examine them closely. But I think the tools are way better now.

I think I paid about £15 for a full set of Bergeon screwdrivers in a wooden box in the 70's. I expect a single screwdriver cost more then that now. :D

Posted

I did some more research on this particular set. Euro tools is the manufacturer and this is their top graded set.

I also spoke to a rep at Jules Borel and he said they are good quality for what you pay.

  • Thanks 1
Posted

I have the AF French and Bergeon Swiss screwdrivers. The AF are just as good in my opinion, and better value.

  • Like 1
Posted

I recently went through the same exercise. I haven't received the drivers yet, but I opted to pass on the generic French drivers. I read variously that they're made BY A&F, and that they just look like A&F and are made nearby (I believe the latter). Everywhere I looked, I saw "good for what you pay", "good for the price", and other variations on the theme. Given drivers are your most used tool, it's one where cheaping out can be a curse that visits you constantly. I opted to pass in favor of the Bergeon standard set. I see them all the time (and almost exclusively) in photos of watchmaking schools. Since students tend to be less than flush with cash, and the schools want to be teaching how to work with movements and not around the shortcomings of tools, I figure that's a good starting point for a value conscious yet thoroughly effective option. 

  • Confused 1
Posted
16 hours ago, spectre6000 said:

I recently went through the same exercise. I haven't received the drivers yet, but I opted to pass on the generic French drivers.
...

I think are hugely exaggerating the matter, and paying undue money and respect to Bergeon. It's the person that does the job, not the tool, I have started with cheap Indian drivers that worked just good, any mistake or slip it was my fault not their. Beside, with A*F we're talking about absolute top quality, with their ball bearing top and excellent blade quality. We should be glad that someone finally smelled the coffe and started offering to a realistic price. Maybe one day you will handle one and understand what I'm talking about.

Posted

It's not Bergeon I'm buying, it's the strategies employed by the schools. The base model Bergeon driver set is so ubiquitous in the schools that I honestly can't think of a photo I've seen of an academic setting that didn't have the Bergeon drivers on all the benches. Combine that with the fact that students are necessarily needing to be as cost effective as possible, and the schools not wanting the tools to be part of the lesson beyond a supply, and it's a solid recommendation. The generic French set is probably great in experienced hands, but starting out, hands lack experience, and there's no need to add additional impediment, however slight.

Looking around here and on other watchmaking oriented sites, the reviews on the generic French drivers sets are thoroughly mixed, with the vast majority saying something to the effect of "good for the money" meaning better can be easily had for more money. So if $50 is your budget, it's a good option. I have no doubt there are plenty of driver sets that are better quality, and even better value than the basic Bergeon model, but personally I'm willing to throw money at it to not worry about it. I buy Snap-On ratchets, Lie-Nielsen planes, and Fluke multimeters. I'm no brand **BLEEP**, but I'll throw money at quality all day, and when the brand and the quality are in alignment, it's a no brainer. I think the schools recognize this, and that was a key part of my decision process.

There's a guy on WUS pushing a Horia set hard. He has experience with them and their use, and in that vacuum, the Horia set is truly the only option for any sane person... but I swear he's the only person on the planet who seems to even know they exist, and all other google indexed mentions (save one, which very well may be influenced by him in the internet echo chamber) are him in various different settings.

My response is valid here because I'm in the same position and just went through the same exercise. Yours is at least as valid, if not more, because you have the set in question and have practical experience using them. Your opinion in this vacuum carries far more weight. I respect your opinion just as I hope you respect that I might come to an alternate conclusion. If I'm wrong, I'm unnecessarily out some subset of $100 in the best case, and at worst have a reasonable backup set of drivers and get to go through the whole exercise a second time (possibly with that Horia set). The OP will have to weigh these and what he finds elsewhere against his own judgement.

Posted

I've seen but have never actually owned any of the Bergeon screwdrivers.. back when I started the choices weren't much different but the regular really cheap all metal screwdrivers were seen as somewhat more acceptable (back in the days before everyone had the internet).. in some ways they still have some uses around the house. 6 months in I upgraded to some non-magnetic ball bearing screwdrivers, and later added a steel tipped set which I've often used since.

Bergeon is an industry standard with which people can expect a certain level of quality. That being said, I've yet to see a sufficiently compelling reason to actually purchase their screwdrivers. The Horia set sounds interesting but at the cheap end of the price spectrum it's not like the cheap ball bearing screwdrivers are nasty, and retouching or replacing tips is still necessary with any.. I'd say there's a bigger difference among "HSS" gravers or 1/2" wrenches.

For context, I'm sometimes really tight and sometimes the opposite - my non-watchmaking lathes are mostly vintage Hardinge with 1 Chinese mini-lathe mixed in.. I don't care much for flash brands but do like quality in some things.

  • 4 months later...
Posted

This is specially problematic when you come across a real small and somewhat rusted screw with worn slit, usually screw head pops off or one side of the slit breaks. 

I got a cheap set with replacable flat blade driver, and collect broken sewing machine needles( real strong) dress a bunch of needles to different sizes. 

I also soak old pieces in coca-cola for 48 hrs, which eliminate the chance of breaking screws. 

Safe removal of old screws is rewarding and worth all the work, certainly beats having to extract broken screws.

  • Like 2
Posted
2 hours ago, Mazboy said:

So was wondering if anyone could recommend a set of screwdrivers that comes with narrow tips to begin with.  

All the quality Swiss made have narrow blades. At this time Cousins is selling unbranded AF  very cheaply.

Posted

There is a sticky thread at the beginning of this section, Screwdriver Sharpening.  It will guide you.

I mostly work on Seiko.  The screw slots are often wider than the blades of my screwdrivers, as recieved new.  Using the above sticky and a few other resources, I tuned my driver blades to match the screws I usually encounter.  Slips and scratches have been reduced greatly. 

It is possible to tune your screwdriver to fit the slot you need it to fit.  All you need is another tool and you will be set for life.

Posted
7 hours ago, bklake said:

I mostly work on Seiko.  The screw slots are often wider than the blades of my screwdrivers, as recieved new.

For Seiko with a ready tool I recommend Anchor drivers, cheap as chips, good blades with spares, they served me well for years. The "upgraded" to some Chinese with a thinner body, which one may like or not.

In fact one needs a minimum  of two sets anway.

  • Like 1
Posted

Here is a link to get you started. https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/screwdriver-sharpeners. 

With this tool and any sharpening stone, you can make a screwdriver using any stock that resembles a screwdriver bit.  Sewing needle, coat hanger, brass rod, plastic rod, square stock.  My favorite is music wire/piano wire.  And, it will fit precisely.  One tip.  After you hone the blade to fit the slot, very slightly round the blade edges and corners.  As honed, the edges are very sharp and will act as a graver should it slip.  

It is a skill you should develop to be a better watchmaker.  Everybody wants to dive in and service a movement right out of the gate.  On my journey to learning this craft, I've found that many skills and processes completely unrelated to movement work, have greatly improved my work on movements. 

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Hi,

 

I've started the Level 2 course, and on inspecting my screwdrivers have realised they are poor quality and damaged.

The sets online seem expensive.

I am working on the CHI3620M Seagull TY3620 movement.

How do I figure out what sizes of screwdrivers will be needed to work on this movement, so that I can buy good quality screwdrivers individually?

If the answer is to just buy the Cousins 9 piece set and it will be fine then let me know! I don't really need a stand if there are cheaper options.

Thanks.

 

Posted

After a while one will make use of most if not all sizes. The unbranded A*F at GBP 2.50 a piece from cousins is the best deal. There is a nice unexpensive fixed stand on Ebay, has a with an al. oxides strip for dressing. The latter is what really matters on a driver, not the brand or price.

  • Like 1
Posted

I think the only time I've ever seen a service manual recommends screwdriver tip sizes was in one of the newer color Rolex service manuals. Otherwise it's the watchmaker's choice.

to give you an idea about personal choice several years ago in one of the BHI journals they reviewed screwdrivers. The particular bergeon screwdriver set I have they really didn't give it a stellar review. They actually liked the A*F set better other than the base which they didn't like at all. then their overall favorite was Horotec.

 

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

    • The watch is from 1990 and was serviced just once around 20 years ago. No idea if the mainspring barrel was ever opened or changed before now.
    • Interesting but I think we have a problem here? We probably need to split hairs on a definition problem. For instance take a real Rolex movement put it in a real Rolex case but not the one it came in take a real dial real hands and make up a watch that is 100% real and what exactly is this? If you send your Rolex in for servicing and anything's been changed at all from what it was when it left the factory Rolex will be unhappy and remove all offending components. This does become a problem of people changing things because they think it's their watch and they want to have a different dial Lord diamonds the bezel or whatever words Rolex sees all of this as evil and bad as far as a Intel Rolex only things the watch is legit if everything is exactly what it was when it left the factory and nothing's been changed including the stem everything asked me Rolex original or their very unhappy about its existence. Then you think about a fake watch what is its real purpose? Well its real purpose is to make money for somebody and fool the customer. So all the watch has to do is look pleasant on the outside and inside can be anything. Typically nobody's going to see inside. So typically anything that's not legit counterfeit movement etc. why would someone spend so much time and effort making it look just like a real Rolex when there's no need to? Unless of course you have one or two movements to impress somebody with this is what's inside your watch but even that is problematic Now we don't end up with I've interesting problem that troubles me where I work. The owner will offend a cage your watch by looking at it carefully with a microscope the timing machine etc. and he will point out all the things that he feels are not appropriate correct or whatever for your watch. But in my example above of mixing and matching legitimate Rolex parts he wouldn't necessarily be able to tell. The problem I have with this is it often times things like his claim to telling a counterfeit is look at the second hand the quality of the secondhand is not as nice as a legitimate one. But maybe somebody replaced a second hand on a real Rolex. Or the other day at work I don't know what it was in before but there was a really pretty movement transparent back and they decided it was fake because of? Now I didn't think it was fake I took one look was beautifully manufactured but they had a reason What bothers me with counterfeit Rolex is or anything counterfeit watch related it is reminding me of a witchhunt. The early days of witch hunting how can we tell a which Manon which? That makes me wonder how many super fakes are really fake at all it's basically somebody deciding it's a fake based upon inappropriate assumptions. Like the secondhand is been changed or the watch was worked on the screws are perfect or other things. Other minor problems with super fakes for instance I have a long story the not going to tell the short version is I found the website once where they claim to be counterfeiting Rolex watches. They even had a picture to prove their counterfeit watch the problem with pictures online how do we know it's really a counterfeit watch and not a real Rolex watch that you're telling us is counterfeit. Oh and they had testimonials from all kinds of people who bought their watches and were very happy with the service of course the problem with the watch is you don't know what's inside it unless you take the back off and just because somebody shows a picture online and says this is their super fake maybe it really isn't a super fake they be there just trying to say that. We end up with a interesting problem of manufacturing a watch. Does Rolex actually make every single part found in their watch? Then the year 2004's basically irrelevant. This is because initially Rolex buys stock in the company and they manufacture Rolex watches. I'm assuming over time Rolex will acquire more stock and only in 2004 do they get the whole company. But the company itself hasn't really changed other than the name on the front of the building. The real question is did they really make every single component found in the Rolex watch from the beginning of time until end of the time? A lot of the components found in a watch would be extremely specialized did they make their own jewels or their own mainsprings for instance? But that is looking at the article they employ a heck of a lot of people now I would guess now that Rolex probably does make everything in-house. Especially when they have nifty CNC equipment like for making screws were he could make a huge batch of one type it instantly switch to another type where before he needed specialized machines for one machine for one screw now manufacturing all kinds of stuff in-house becomes very simple. But still is possible that in the early days they might have outsourced something may be perhaps. But conceivably we do have minor changes in thing is due to how things have been made over time which can lead to confusions over whether this is legit or not when it may be as a change of manufacturing methods oh and regarding the screws found in your Rolex watch? In about mid-80s I went to a school reunion in Switzerland. One of things we could do was visit a factory and I picked Rolex because I wanted to see the mass production making of Rolex watches. Which is very disappointed I did not get the sea at all because didn't see them making Rolex watches in their Geneva headquarters even though the building is really fake? So what did we get to see well after sales service because after all were watchmakers we should see that. Did learn something interesting about Rolex screws if your watch was sent to Rolex the screws that come back are not the ones that went there. As they are using powered screwdrivers they don't want to risk breaking heads off and they will replace the screws of every single watch. The other one of interest was suppose there's a scratch and you can see the brass? No problem they have a solution that basically electoral plates without electricity so the scratch goes away. The research Department was quite boring and didn't look like anyone was ever there. Then it was too long ago to remember all the details other than I was disappointed I want to see manufacturing.   Yes the joys of artificial intelligence that is more like a trained monkey that's there to please you.
    • Hey everybody! I just registered to WRT. I found this forum searching for informations about ELMA watch cleaning machines (will get one ELMA tomorrow ✌️). I'm new in watch repair, collecting watch repair tools to fill up my work space 😎.   Greetings from Vienna Michael
    • Is it not covered in the manual under Profix Cap Jewels?
×
×
  • Create New...