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Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:30 am
by nuhobby
Hi,
I have been amateur-tinkering with wristwatches for about a year now. There is a lot to learn, particularly in the mechanical realm. It's just a hobby and I'm not certified or trained. It can be very fun, as well as most frustrating at times!

One aspect of the work has greatly improved this week. I got my work surface elevated close to chest / neck height, provided I use my work-seat. This is a specially designed fixture that sits nicely on my 510-worktable, and can be removed easily. The work posture and work ergonomics are much better than I've had before:
Shopsmith_with_BenchTop.jpg
Shopsmith_with_BenchTop.jpg (237.21 KiB) Viewed 6031 times
Watch_Tinkering_Bench.jpg
Watch_Tinkering_Bench.jpg (240.12 KiB) Viewed 6031 times

Also, as a reminder of some of my earlier posts... The PowerPro 250 RPM setting opens up a number of opportunities for watch-bezel finishing, even watch-bezel painting as I did last Christmas :)
Chucked Striping Jig.jpg
Chucked Striping Jig.jpg (141.26 KiB) Viewed 6031 times

Happy Tinkering!
Chris

Using Shopsmith for Turning Acetal (Delrin)

Posted: Tue Sep 29, 2020 1:23 pm
by nuhobby
Further into the watch-tinkering stuff....

I had got a mish-mash of Asian-sourced watch components and a movement which I wanted to build into something working. However in my case, the subject watch-case was designed for a thicker movement than the one I wanted to use.

Reading up a bit, I'd seen the use of Acetal (Delrin) spacers from watchmakers with Taig lathes and the like. But elsewhere I saw that some wood-lathe folks had turned acetal successfully for their pens and small projects.

Challenge accepted, and first proof of concept!


Here is some 1.5" acetal chucked into my 4-jaw:
Chucked Acetal.jpg
Chucked Acetal.jpg (252.24 KiB) Viewed 5394 times

Here is the rough outcome, which was not bad; I did keep it, and I hand filed it a bit more after this:
Acetal Ring Trial.jpg
Acetal Ring Trial.jpg (182.43 KiB) Viewed 5394 times

Here's the watch-in-progress, where the stem finally inserts correctly, now that the movement is spaced 'down' a tad relative to the crystal:
Spacer Trial.jpg
Spacer Trial.jpg (237.97 KiB) Viewed 5394 times

Have a great week!

Chris

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2020 3:54 pm
by nuhobby
Next up, the acid test!
The real movement arrived and was fitted with new hands. Once everything seemed to run well, I went ahead and mounted it up in the case. I'll do more run-in testing and adjusting, then it should be worthy to seal up for use!

P.S. I also need to trim the length of the winding stem, still.

Chris
Spaced Movement In Place.jpg
Spaced Movement In Place.jpg (218.8 KiB) Viewed 5259 times

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Thu Oct 01, 2020 6:28 pm
by RFGuy
Looks sharp!

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Fri Oct 02, 2020 10:02 am
by reible
I don't know much about watches but I do like the tinkering bench idea. I think I will add one of those to my shop, not for working with watches but for other things that I do play with. Well I did find a watch that I could try and take apart just to see what makes it tick, but, well it doesn't tick and doubt it ever will.
watch.jpg
watch.jpg (106.68 KiB) Viewed 5174 times
It does say water resistant but this one must have had some shock as the little hands are loose inside....... and it is very weathered. Well it would be a nice first project for a tinker bench.

What is the green material? I have a left over sheet of self stick felt that is just sitting around so I was thinking that might be an option but then what you are using interests me....

Ed

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Fri Oct 02, 2020 12:47 pm
by nuhobby
Ha Ha! We work with what we must!

Yeah, that green mat is a specialized non-skid work mat from Bergeon. I maybe could have improvised with something else, but that seemed to be "the bee's knees" among watch experts. No complaints, and it's replaceable.

Keep tinkering!

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2020 7:09 am
by nuhobby
Here was a recent project I did for a buddy. Not a super-rare watch (it's a fairly modern quartz with retro military styling)...I put in a new movement, new crystal, cleaned the hands-corrosions with 1500 grit sandpaper:
Before_Afterjpg.jpg
Before_Afterjpg.jpg (167.72 KiB) Viewed 3937 times
Chris

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2020 7:28 am
by RFGuy
Wow! Impressive. Hard to believe that it is the same watch.

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2020 6:57 pm
by Jd1a
Very nice work




very nice work

Re: Special Shopsmith Hack, Watch Tinkering Bench

Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2022 8:20 am
by nuhobby
Yes, I've wasted many a dollar, but I finally made a pretty good score.

I found a used watch on eBay that had the disclaimer, "needs battery" :
Auction Watch.JPG
Auction Watch.JPG (36.62 KiB) Viewed 1515 times

Well, it did not need a battery because it had a very high-quality Swiss hand-wound movement :) The watch is by Ollech & Wajs.
After some assessment, I put in a new glass crystal, and I changed the hands. The original hands had a nice style, but their illumination was shot, and the lume-material had cracked due to the stress-risers inherent in the shape of the broad arrow. So I got in some aftermarket hands:
Cleaned_up Swiss_Watch.JPG
Cleaned_up Swiss_Watch.JPG (103.78 KiB) Viewed 1515 times

Happy Hunting!
Chris