Saturday, 26 July 2025

Fixing a worn pivot hole

Lower quality watches cut costs by reducing the number of jewels in a movement. A 17 jewel movement is considered fully jeweled, 15 jewels are still quite high quality but it is all downhill from there.

7 jewel movements wre common, especially pre-1960s and were regarded as everyday watches for everyone which were still of decent quality as pallet fork and balance were properly jewelled. Anything less than 7 jewels would never function properly but these types of movements, especially one jewel ones were common in the 1930s to 1950s as extremely cheap, mass produced watches truly for the masses.

Jewels, made of synthetic ruby (or garnet and even glass in some cases for cost-cutting reasons) are extremely hard and flat thus providing a perfect material for bearings. Watch wheel pivots are made of hardened steel so the jewel will never wear out and with proper maintenance the pivots will also stay in good shape for a long time.

 There is a problem with unjewweled pivot holes. Watch plates are made of brass, most often plated with nickle, rhodium or some other metal. This means that unjewelled pivot holes are softer than the hardened steel pivots that ride inside them so eventually, and especially with older natural oils the pivot hole would stretch, become larger and go out of round.

There are two ways to fix this situation, either by closing the hole with a staking set or by completely cutting out the hole and inserting a friction-fit hard brass bushing. This is generally expected to be manufactured by the watchmaker so not every pivot size and bushing diameter combination are readily available to purchase. Such manufacturing requires a lathe.

In this post I'll show the repair of a worn pivot hole using a staking set, a smoothing broach and a reamer.

 

The pivot clearly cannot turn properly in the hole and sometimes rests at an angle. Other than causing increased friction at the pivot, the wheels will suffer from increased friction due to unoptimal meshing between the teeth of the wheel and the next wheel's pinion leaves. The whel here would barely rotate when blown at with a hand blower even if no other wheels were installed.


Always, always mark the hole. Update: round off the hole with a broach before proceeding! If not done this can cause the hole to wander just enough to cause the teeth to bind in the pinion.

Two rounded punches need to be used. A flat punch/stake can be used to support the hole from the bottom instead of a rounded punch but I find that doing this does not close the hole evenly vertically, with the bottom being wider than the top.


 



Tap tap tap.


The hole after closing with the staking set. A new inner ridge has formed where the hole closed. This also makes the hole round but there's a limit to how far gone a hole can be rounded with this method.

Checking the fit; pivot barely fits now.


Smoothing broach.
 

After broaching the pivot fits with just the right amount of play.


The hole from the top, nice and round. Broaching the hole causes a small burr to form on the edge so it needs to be deburred as otherwise oil would get stuck around the burr instead of flowing around the pivot. Due to the holes being so small (around 0.24mm in this case) a reamer needs to be used for deburring.

Seitz jewelling tool 106 reamer and reaming handle, perfect for the job.

 

The pivot in the hole; doesn't look like much but that's the point: if somethng would be noticed it means that something is wrong. Should look like a normal pivot in a normal hole.


 Both top and bottom holes will probably need this treatment and here we can see the difference fixing one or both holes makes. The first video is with the top hole fixed, an improvement surely but it is obvious that there's extra fiction.


With both fixed and a little 9010 oil in the top hole. The difference is massive and will help the watch run better. This has to be repeated for all unjeweled pivots which is a time consuming, exact task. Not difficult to be sure but there's quite some checking and re-checking. A fairly expensive repair due to the time involved and extremly specific skills required.

Tuesday, 15 July 2025

Junghans 620.00: bad manufacturing

 This one was torture. The movement had a broken escape wheel and missing exit stone so got a 620.52 donor movement.

However the movement was basically unservicable due to every steady post in the movement being extremely tight, badly finished or even crooked. So this movement commits the worse sin of all: horrible manufacturing.

The balance wheel was also warped and while trying to get the hairspring out it broke. 

 The donor did not have the same problems but unfortunately it did not fit in the case.

 And that horrible integrated barrel arbor/ratchet wheel design is just horrible.

I want to forget I ever came across this movement. An expensive lesson.

 








 

 

How to add live escapement audio to a Weishi timegrapher: a guide

 In my previous post here https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1111331671787346124/4208845159537743819 I made a box that allows connecting a Weishi timegrapher's microphone to a computer or powered speaker. That can be very useful for long term recoridng and diagnostics by using some timegrapher application on a PC.

 Now I'm explaining how to add live audio of the escapement to a Weishi. The resons are the same as before: the pre-recorded audio of the Weishi limits usefulness and I don't want to spend 3000 euros on a pro-level timegrapher.

What's needed:

  • GX 16 3 pin male to female Y splitter. The male end connects to the timegrapher speaker, one female end goes to the timegrapher and the other to the speaker.



     
     
     
  • GX 16 3 pin male adapter. Two of these pins will connect to the AUX cable.

  • Speaker AUX cable. This is a bog-standard 3.5mm speaker jack.
  • A speaker with AUX input. I got a cheap one from AliExpress and it works fine. A wireless speaker will reduce desk clutter. 

How to:

  1. Keep wires relatively long as feedback can be an issue. 
  2.  Cut out one of the AUX cable's ends so that you're left with one male AUX end and the other end with bare wires.
  3. Figure out the wiring for the tip and sleeve, i.e the top and bottom parts of the connector. The middle part, the ring, is not needed. In my case red was tip and blue was sleeve and the extra cable wasn't needed.
  4. Connect pin 1 of the GX 16 adapter (blue wire) to the AUX cable's tip wire (red).
  5. Connect pin 2 of the GX 16 adapter (brown wire) to the AUX cable's sleeve wire (blue).
  6. Connect AUX to the speaker, microphone to the Y splitter and Y spliiter to both the timegrapher and the GX16 adapter.

 

 

 


 And a recording of the result with live escapement audio from a movement, EB 1333 in this case. You can even hear an escapement problem in my recording that corresponds to issues in the graph.

 

 

 

Sunday, 13 July 2025

Sotwa with FHF 59-21: A tiny movement that is a joy to work on

 This one was easy and straightfoward except for rust in the escape wheel's pinion leaves. The dial was in a bad state too and it seems that either there was no lacquer or it was completely damaged because the standard cleanup of water, a qtip and rolling gently removed some letters. Kinda disappointing but a lesson learned.

  


On the timegrapher, before service. Not too bad but it is obvious something was wrong here. Pretty sure it was the rust in the escape wheel's pinion wheels.

 








Small but mighty.




The escape wheel before and after, huge difference after polishing with dialux and a pointy stick.





Timegrapher results. Before

Position Rate Amplitude Beat Error
DU 234 324 5.9 ?????
DD 337 177 4.1
CR 448 335 5.8 ?????
CD 502 289 7.1 ?????
CU 429 123 4.9















Delta 268


Mean 343.2 184.8 4.38

And after.

Position Rate Amplitude Beat Error
DU 19 283 0
DD 2 310 0.1
CR -4 269 0.2
CD 5 283 0.2
CU -3 279 0.1












Delta 23

Mean 0 228.2 0.12   

Quite the improvement. Quite some difference between DU and DD and I suspect it is a problem with the escape wheel not having been replaced. But it was good practice and got respectable results after manually polishing between the pinion leaves of such a tiny wheel.

Overall happy with this one, except I wish I didn't touch the dial. I've also been enjoying working on FHF movements, they're well built and easy to service.

                                                                     


 

Bushing an egg-shaped hole without a lathe

 This wasn't the smartest idea I've ever had. My 1-jewel Swiss movement had an egg-shaped hole for the barrel arbour in the bridge a...