Jump to content

Hiya from Andy the Amateur Horologist


AndyS

Recommended Posts

I've really gotten into Watch Servicing. Miyota 8215 movements, Orient 1946- Seiko 7625a.

And as of today a Seiko 7006a. But having issues with the day wheel misaligning with the date wheel.

Any help and advice would be much appreciated.

I'm really enjoying the hobby and get great satisfaction from disassembly, cleaning, reassembly timing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi AndyS, Welcome.  I cleaned and timed a 7006 some time ago but no issues were noticed with the problem that you mention. Check the assy: and alignment. Good wishes, Mike. PS. There are many talented people here if you need help.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the advice Mike.

I'll recheck the alignment and see if I can improve the position of the day wheel. 

The 7006 is a great movement to work on. I love the design and the ingenuity upon seeing the quick set date change. Utilising the clutch wheel turning the date ring. You have to hand it to Seiko!! 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, AndyS said:

Thanks for the advice Mike.

I'll recheck the alignment and see if I can improve the position of the day wheel. 

The 7006 is a great movement to work on. I love the design and the ingenuity upon seeing the quick set date change. Utilising the clutch wheel turning the date ring. You have to hand it to Seiko!! 

Yes, Seiko`s are a good watch in my opinion. I am not a qualified watchmaker just a Jobber Fixer. I did get some in depth training many years ago from a friend now gone who worked for Vacheron Constantin in Geneva. This,  all those years ago was a great help to me and I have not forgotten very much.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's really good. The knowledge you will have is invaluable. I believe the main aim is to keep the trade going. Any tips and advice would be a great help.

Your Friend was a Top Watch maker working for a Prestigious company Vacheron Constantin. 

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

    • This is not rare at all, the dial code and case code don't usually match.
    • Good question!! Anyone know of a substitute movement??!! 🤔🙏
    • Interesting issue that I just noticed: this Seiko 5actus Watch from 1977 has a calibre listing on the dial of 7019-8030R but on the case back it says 7019-8010!! Like a mis-printed coin, is this watch therefore worth a lot of money for its rarity?? 🤪😲🤔🤪
    • I wish that was the case. The Aegler movements used in the early days by Wilsdorf & Davis (for brands like Rolex and Rolco) came in several sizes and without designated calibre numbers that survive.  They become a bit easier to identify during the 1920s. Below is an Aegler-Rebberg, 25.74mm in diameter. It’s from a woman’s Rolex wristwatch. Stamped Rebberg and 500 on the dial plate (but it isn’t a Rebberg 500, it’s the wrong size).  I’d be interested if anyone can identify the movement.  It is based off the Aegler Nr.1, circa 1903, but they based many many calibres of different sizes on it. The closest I have to a positive ID is the  ‘Rolex Nr.50’ circa 1917, but no dial side images or movement sizes are available in the references. There are identical looking movements in many sizes.  The 25.74mm of this movement is a particularly strange size for the era, it equates to 11.41 lignes.      Best Regards, Mark
    • It looks like this movement comes with a number of different shock settings. Emmywatch shows that it comes in versions with no shock settings, 'Incabloc', 'shock resist', and 'Supershock'. Perhaps the different settings position the impulse jewel/roller table in a non-ideal position relative to the pallet fork/guard pin. Are you able to check under high magnification if the pallet fork and roller table are able to operate without any interference? Just for fun I took a look and I have one FHF 70 in my collection, a West End Secundus with a non-shock protected FHF70. I had a note with the watch that said, "Movement is stamped 'FHF 70', but the FHF70 looks to have sub-seconds instead of center seconds movement (??)" but that a google search turned up both types for this movement. EDIT: I just took a look in my parts drawer and I have a few of these movements, both in center seconds and sweep seconds, but they all are non-shock protected.  
×
×
  • Create New...