I don’t have those brands, but my LF with that blade style click lever really feels great with the fine clicks but being buttery smooth with next to no resistance.
In some of my previous threads, I've highlighted this small , but crucial and sometimes wonderfully beautiful component of a watch's movement. The click is a pawl often shaped like a beak or as a cam with two tips. It's held in tension by a spring that fo...
I don’t have those brands, but my LF with that blade style click lever really feels great with the fine clicks but being buttery smooth with next to no resistance.
It’s a reversing system for tandem winding, basically the same as you’d find in the reverser wheels of an ETA or Rolex movement. There is another click underneath the ratchet wheels to retain the mainspring, as can be seen in this image from Amanico . It'...
I knew that by tackling such a technical subject, I risked making mistakes. But in the end, it doesn't matter, because fortunately, there are people like you who know more and it’s an opportunity to learn! Best, Emmanuel
I enjoyed every bit of it, the legend was useful. The finishing of the movement plates on the Philippe Dufour pocket watch is exquisite. Laslty I got a chance to play with the GS a few weeks back and it is a very tactile movement, I hope they use it in mo...
One of these days I would like to own a watch with a traditional blade style click spring. The Chaykin double barrel is one I hadn't seen before, very cool, and I am a big fan of the Greubel implementation since it feels so 3d in a very 2d world. Garrick ...