AndrewD[HoMe Moderator]
12829
A potential lifesaver ...
I knew I had seen an advert that followed the sentiments in your post, but it took me a few days to remember where ...
amplitude
By: dknespl : April 15th, 2010-00:32
Could that be that on the watch winder the main spring is constantly (almost) fully wound, therefore it has more power and the balance runs at full amplitude, i.e. the period is longer and the watch runs slower? It depends how the watch was regulated, if ...
Excellent idea.
By: BDLJ : April 15th, 2010-03:40
I like that idea, dknespl. Also with you on the state of mainspring wind on a winder affecting the rate. What about the adjustments being performed at defined positions for a defined period. So, when on a winder, these positions and periods will not be 10...
Up Down
By: BDLJ : April 15th, 2010-03:46
I know the history of up/down indicators...And I'd happily make that statement about a non-vintage watch. Especially when there's some nice script on the dial telling you so...Reserve de Marche...ick. Better to have "Levery-thingy-from-the-Mainspring...
Me too !!
By: AndrewD : April 15th, 2010-15:43
Where have you been all of my life, TM? J Whenever this issue of RdM indicators on automatic versus manual wind watches comes up in discussion I feel on the outer because the consensus seems to be that they are more useful on manual than automatic watches...
I am surprised..
By: BDLJ : April 15th, 2010-16:40
...at your experience of automatics. (And I'm not trying to be facetious). I would have thought that as long as one is walking about, even around the office (and I do work in an office so am sedentary for hours at a time, sadly) the automatic winding woul...
External influences
By: nickd : April 15th, 2010-04:03
I think it's partly down to the magnitude of the influence of external forces on the system. Compare the watch in question with an uber-precision clock in a clock vault: The clock is designed to run in an environment where as many external influences as p...
Well put, Nick
By: BDLJ : April 15th, 2010-20:14
This: "So, the watch that's running +/-0s/d on the wrist has found an equilibrium where the adjustments/regulation balance out the average of the external influences. On the winder, these factors aren't present, so it goes to hell in a bucket (or vice ver...
Lubrication fault
By: 1440 : April 16th, 2010-07:35
Knocking is tytpically due to too much braking grease in the barrel, so the mainspring does not slip at the correct level of power. Of course there are other contributing factors, but this would be the most common reason. Another can simply be the wrong m...
Too strong a spring
By: jkingston : April 16th, 2010-10:16
In the example I know best, my own watch, it was that the strength of the spring when fully wound was too great. That's why rate was great under all conditions, except fully wound. Of course since daily wear did not fully wind the spring, but the winder d...
user error?
By: ei8htohms : April 16th, 2010-17:41
Of course I'm joking, but as someone who deals with a large number of difficult to understand, substantiate or certainly confirm client conplaints every other day or two, the thought does cross my mind. I agree with the honorables Mr.s Kingston and 1440 t...