rilu
7 October 2008, 12:00 PM
http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/8845/rsczy5xt7.jpg
Hope this will help.
that is a good sheet there, "i like it".
we must remember that watch can varry widely in all 6 positions. if the hairspring or balance aren't perfectly poised it can have huge diferences in all vertical positions. horizontal positions usually aren't effected by this poising error. usually dial up and dial down are going to be verry close to the same rate unless the pivots are flat. so for example in seconds per day dial up(DU) could be +2, dial down (DD)0, crown up(CU) +4,crown down(CD) -2, crown left(CL)-3. so if it runs fast you would put it crown down and if slow you would put it dial up or crown up. if your daily rates are DU+3,DD+3,CU+1,CD+2,CL+2, in this case it wouldnt matter how you put it because all positions are positive and so close you would never see a diference, same thing if all numbers are negative. if the balance is not poised or hairspring off center you could get DU+10,DD+8,CU+14,CD-15CL-1,CR+3, this usually ocurs in vintage watches though. then it would be alot easier to test the positions.
in these watches with poising errors like these, if these are the daily rates when the amplitude of the balance is above 220, they will be reversed when the abplitude is below 220 in vertical positions only.so then making CU-14 and CD+15. hope this helps a little.:cheers:
Hope this will help.
that is a good sheet there, "i like it".
we must remember that watch can varry widely in all 6 positions. if the hairspring or balance aren't perfectly poised it can have huge diferences in all vertical positions. horizontal positions usually aren't effected by this poising error. usually dial up and dial down are going to be verry close to the same rate unless the pivots are flat. so for example in seconds per day dial up(DU) could be +2, dial down (DD)0, crown up(CU) +4,crown down(CD) -2, crown left(CL)-3. so if it runs fast you would put it crown down and if slow you would put it dial up or crown up. if your daily rates are DU+3,DD+3,CU+1,CD+2,CL+2, in this case it wouldnt matter how you put it because all positions are positive and so close you would never see a diference, same thing if all numbers are negative. if the balance is not poised or hairspring off center you could get DU+10,DD+8,CU+14,CD-15CL-1,CR+3, this usually ocurs in vintage watches though. then it would be alot easier to test the positions.
in these watches with poising errors like these, if these are the daily rates when the amplitude of the balance is above 220, they will be reversed when the abplitude is below 220 in vertical positions only.so then making CU-14 and CD+15. hope this helps a little.:cheers: