Prodyutb
168
Thanks for sharing
Interesting details from the old school manual.
I was wondering if Rolex mentioned anything about gains or losses due to temperature variations.
I have seen Seiko mechanical watch manuals stating that a warmer temperature caused the watch to lose seconds and vice versa.
Eternal truths ? Or do more modern watches with super everything resistant alloys actually do not get affected in the same manner ?
The old rules...
By: jenjames : February 13th, 2018-22:25
Just wondering does these good old rules (re the regulating bit) still applicable for today’s model Rolexes such as the Day Date 40 or the sport models? 🤔 Wish everyone a good weekend ahead! Almost Friday... getting there.. 😬😅 Jen ...
Thanks for sharing
By: Prodyutb : February 14th, 2018-02:47
Interesting details from the old school manual. I was wondering if Rolex mentioned anything about gains or losses due to temperature variations. I have seen Seiko mechanical watch manuals stating that a warmer temperature caused the watch to lose seconds ...
In my experience,
By: diracpoint : February 14th, 2018-09:50
positional regulation does not work on modern Rolex watches. I have done this experiment on a 2010 Milgauss GV and 2014 Sky-dweller, and in all positions they tend to gain 1 or 2 secs per day. [I didn't do this on more modern watches (>2015), since they r...