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It's straight, honest

 

Bart --

As described in perhaps too much detail in my post below, the second hand on this watch (it's mine, so I should know) is dead straight.  Much farther up in this thread, someone actually superimposed a dashed line down the seconds hand on the same picture to show this.  Furthermore, if you take a straight-edged piece of cardboard (I just did) and angle it across the 6th photo down in my Christmas post from 46.2 seconds to 16.2 seconds, you'll find that it bisects both the center pivot and both arms of the hand.  I saw the same "brown faced" watch pictures (a while ago) that you did, and they concerned me -- so I have paid special attention to be sure that the seconds hand on mine is straight!

Part of the problem is that the two parts of the hand are of different circumferences, and (I'm not  100 percent sure about this, as I'm on the road right now and the watch is locked up elsewhere) I'm pretty confident that the top edge of the "big" end of the hand is in a different horizontal plane than the top edge of the pointed end of the hand -- which in turn is tapered so is of variable radius itself.  In photos, this can create the effect that the two parts of the hand appear misaligned even when they're not.

So, if you're looking for confirmation that the seconds hands of Kari's watches are as a general matter misaligned, my watch does not provide that confirmation -- in fact it is one data point in the opposite direction.

Best,

Gary G

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