Watchnoob
21
Really hard to show with a single picture.
Basically for part of the dial, the minute hand would be showing as if the watch is half a minute fast, but for the rest of dial the minute hand would be on time. It’s not a true “time inaccuracy”, it’s due to the backlash in the gears. I was told it can happen when you adjust time backwards, and that they may be able to address it by opening up the watch. Wondering if anyone else has experience with this and if they were able to address it. This message has been edited by India Whiskey Charlie on 2025-08-07 00:25:18
cannon pinion
By: golden hands : August 7th, 2025-09:45
if the watch was second hand i would say this is the problem as wear would incur and it would need tightening. on a new watch this should not happen-unless the new machined cannon pinion is faulty/outside tolerance. see the 2 diagrams to explain ...
Hmm.
By: patrick_y : August 7th, 2025-23:58
Interesting problem. If it were a minute hand discrepancy, that would mean that the gears are uneven? Although this seems highly unlikely. An off-centered dial would also have the same effect - but would also be extremely unlikely. Stumped!
backlash
By: golden hands : August 7th, 2025-17:20
i think you mean-LOSS-which the watch is losing time when in the four positions stated GAIN-which the watch 'speeds up' in time in the other 2 positions. all in a day stop using BACKLASH-as that is a term used in gearing and not a watch term a watch will ...