WatchProSite|Market|Digest

Horological Meandering

Among other reasons, I think single-plane winders are hard on lubrication.

 

Somewhat overlapping with some other comments:

1. The watch's state of wind is different on the winder than on the wrist. Wrist movements normally are vigorous enough to keep the watch fully wound, while some winders seem to keep the watch only partially wound.

2. The watch's range of positions is different on a single-plane winder than on the wrist. It's different on a windmill-type winder too, but the windmill-type approximates the wrist more closely.

3. When you wear the watch you probably leave it flat every night while you sleep, or at least in a consistent position. If that happens to be a lucky position and the watch also is correctly adjusted for way your wrist moves when you wear it, you will get good timekeeping. On the winder, the watch will rest in different positions. If one of those positions is particularly weak, on the days the watch happens to rest in that position you will get a big variation.

4. If you keep the watch on a single-plane winder consistently, the pivots will always be rubbing against the same parts of the jewels. That could lead to wear, or at least make it difficult for those parts to remain lubricated.

  login to reply