Hi everyone,
I thought I'd say hello and introduce myself a little before flooding the boards with all my newby questions. (I hope that's ok to do here... I've tried other forums but they are very advanced and I got the distinct feeling no one had patience for answering a bunch of basic questions there.... )
I'm a hobbyist and quite new at this. I got fascinated with watches after my great aunt, who is Swiss, left me a bunch of old watches, a Zenith PW, a few IWC wrist watches, etc. I had a career in medical research for 10 years, and had to retire early due to health reasons, so watch repair is a good substitute hobby I can do at home to keep me occupied (actually, so far I find watchmaking to be much more challenging than what I was doing in the lab... way tougher... :)
I did the TimeZone watch school courses 1 and 2, and then cleaned several old practice movements I got on the bay. (I like to practice on old Bulova movements, because they are inexpensive and many of them have interchangeable parts so if you lose a part you can scavange other movements... ).
So far I'm finding this a bit frustrating, because nothing I've cleaned so far keeps time. One of the big mistakes I made was to use small little 2.5oz glass jars for cleaning... the jars had metal lids, but the inside of the lids were lined with plastic, and as the L&R cleaning solution heated up in the ultrasonic it dissolved the plastic liners on the lids, so several of my practice movements ended up contaminated with sticky plastic all over them... I didn't realize what was happening until I noticed all my hairsprings were sticking together even after a dunk in One Dip, and then I noticed that the plastic liner on the bottom of the caps was all eaten away... oooops. Thank goodness they were just practice movements... I've tried re-cleaning some of them several times to try to decontaminate them, but so far no luck. I'll keep trying to salvage whatever I can. At least this keeps me busy, anyway.
So that's where I am. I would like to eventually tackle replacing balance staffs, but for now I'd like to clean a movement or two and actually have them keep time. This is a really fascinating hobby and very engrossing, and I'm afraid I've become quite addicted to it all. I'm sure people can relate. I've watched several of Mark's videos and they are fantastic - he makes it look so easy!
Anyway looking forward to being able to ask questions here and there. Thanks to Mark for all the great videos.
Ali