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Old 20 November 2018, 06:48 PM   #1
LPan
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What's the acceptable timekeeping rule for an older 5 digit reference?

I have a 2002 SD 16600 and it is going fast by over 10 seconds a day. Is that acceptable for a 16yr old Rolex??
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Old 20 November 2018, 06:50 PM   #2
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Seems to be outside of range to be honest. I have a 2006, 14000M, Rolex Air King which is +2-+3 seconds per day.
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Old 20 November 2018, 06:55 PM   #3
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Would not bother me at all
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Old 20 November 2018, 06:59 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LPan View Post
I have a 2002 SD 16600 and it is going fast by over 10 seconds a day. Is that acceptable for a 16yr old Rolex??
Depends on how and what your testing method was.
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"The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop. Now is the only time you actually own the time, Place no faith in time, for the clock may soon be still for ever."
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Old 20 November 2018, 07:40 PM   #5
juktagt
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I haven’t got round to checking mine, but it’s on my to do very soon! I’ll report back.
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Old 20 November 2018, 07:43 PM   #6
LPan
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Quote:
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Depends on how and what your testing method was.
Its just something I noticed whilst wearing it the last few days. I would have thought irrespective of age, as long as its been serviced it should be within just a few seconds each day?
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Old 20 November 2018, 09:22 PM   #7
padi56
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Its just something I noticed whilst wearing it the last few days. I would have thought irrespective of age, as long as its been serviced it should be within just a few seconds each day?
Remember this the escapement of a mechanical watch in 24 hours pushes the gears 432,000 times. Since a day has 86,400 seconds, even a watch that runs five minutes fast or slow each day has an accuracy of over 99.6 percent! A finer mechanical watch that gains or loses about six to nine seconds a day or about a minute a week has a breathtaking precision of over 99.99 per cent. This is very high precision, given the fact that the movement is constantly affected by the earth's gravity, metal expansion and contraction, temperature variations,mainspring power-reserve subtle changes in lubrication and friction, shocks, and so on.The fact is that no mechanical watch made will keep perfect time, very close yes but perfect no.The COSC spec is a average of -4 to +6 over 24 hours..So most Rolex are 99.994% accurate what more could anyone ask from a mechanical watch.Have you ever given your watch a full manual wind say 40 full crown turn clock wise.?

The correct way to check any watch for accuracy first give your watch a full manual wind thats 40 full crown turns clockwise only.Then set your watch with a reliable time source for this test any quartz watch/clock will do thats accurate enough.Wear your watch for 8 hours plus a day with reasonable wrist activity to wind it and keep power reserve at peak, check time once only every 24 hours with same setting source, write down the lose or gain do this for 7 complete days.Then average out the lose or gain over those 7 days for a accurate result.If watch is then showing poor accuracy over the COSC spec get it regulated .
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All posts are my own opinion and my opinion only.

"The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop. Now is the only time you actually own the time, Place no faith in time, for the clock may soon be still for ever."
Good Judgement comes from experience,experience comes from Bad Judgement,.Buy quality, cry once; buy cheap, cry again and again.

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Old 20 November 2018, 09:32 PM   #8
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My 1984 3085 movement is currently doing +2 per day.

Age is irrelevant. Condition and regulation are what matters.

If your 16600 hasn't been serviced in 16 years then it's certainly time. Running +10 per day says it needs it.
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Old 20 November 2018, 11:35 PM   #9
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Nice! Thanks for the tips, fellas! Will take note of those.
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Old 20 November 2018, 11:38 PM   #10
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Yep its going in for a service next week to check everything over. Thanks
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Old 21 November 2018, 12:03 AM   #11
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Assuming it's running strong and regulated, COSC IMO.
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Old 21 November 2018, 02:38 AM   #12
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For what it’s worth my 1986 sub keeps better time than that but fluctuates slightly
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Old 21 November 2018, 03:05 AM   #13
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Old 21 November 2018, 03:30 AM   #14
mikkoi
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Quote:
Originally Posted by padi56 View Post
Remember this the escapement of a mechanical watch in 24 hours pushes the gears 432,000 times. Since a day has 86,400 seconds, even a watch that runs five minutes fast or slow each day has an accuracy of over 99.6 percent! A finer mechanical watch that gains or loses about six to nine seconds a day or about a minute a week has a breathtaking precision of over 99.99 per cent. This is very high precision, given the fact that the movement is constantly affected by the earth's gravity, metal expansion and contraction, temperature variations,mainspring power-reserve subtle changes in lubrication and friction, shocks, and so on.The fact is that no mechanical watch made will keep perfect time, very close yes but perfect no.The COSC spec is a average of -4 to +6 over 24 hours..So most Rolex are 99.994% accurate what more could anyone ask from a mechanical watch.Have you ever given your watch a full manual wind say 40 full crown turn clock wise.?



The correct way to check any watch for accuracy first give your watch a full manual wind thats 40 full crown turns clockwise only.Then set your watch with a reliable time source for this test any quartz watch/clock will do thats accurate enough.Wear your watch for 8 hours plus a day with reasonable wrist activity to wind it and keep power reserve at peak, check time once only every 24 hours with same setting source, write down the lose or gain do this for 7 complete days.Then average out the lose or gain over those 7 days for a accurate result.If watch is then showing poor accuracy over the COSC spec get it regulated .


This was great! Thanks


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