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[Misc] For those who have a mechanical watch O/T



Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
How accurate is yours? How many seconds a day does it gain or lose?

Just had mine serviced and regulated and it has gone from losing a minute a day to losing a second a day and I am VERY chuffed :smile:

Very off topic I know but I love mechanical watches :shrug:

Wotcha got?

Expecting “who needs a watch when you have a phone” humour :rolleyes:

Tudor Heritage Ranger here.
 




Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
11,846
Cumbria
My 1920s ladies pocket watch loses about a minute or so a month, so pretty much the same as you. Did you know that the little pocket in jeans was specifically for your pocket watch - and that's where I keep mine. I broke the glass last year, using my body to heave something into a skip - yet managed to source a new glass online from someone who had come across an ancient tray of unused pocket watch glasses.

Love it.

Along with my fountain pens.
 


Superphil

Dismember
Jul 7, 2003
25,420
In a pile of football shirts
I have a 1965 Omega Chronostop which I wear pretty much every day, it gains 2-3 minutes a day I reckon.
 


Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
I have a 1965 Omega Chronostop which I wear pretty much every day, it gains 2-3 minutes a day I reckon.

Get it regulated!

Oh, and nice rare watch :thumbsup:
 






I have had a cheapo version of the Yuri Gagarin Sturmanskie watch for quite a few years, had to change the battery once but keeps great time, I may have to adjust a bit every few months? https://sturmanskie.com/catalog/gagarin/
 




Harold

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
1,308
Hastings
Workmate of mine is an avid collector. He has started his own watch company as a sideline, realising his own designs.

He is watch mad (Dad worked for Rolex) and his dream is to quit his job and do this full time.

https://tesourotimepiece.com/
 




Superphil

Dismember
Jul 7, 2003
25,420
In a pile of football shirts
Get it regulated!

Oh, and nice rare watch :thumbsup:

It needs a bit of work, I’ve had it for 15 odd years. Needs the hub where the hands connect sorting out and also the ‘glass’ needs sealing properly. The bracelet needs a bit of love, all in all it needs a good resto/renovation, and if possible the timekeeping improved.
 


D

Deleted member 2719

Guest
Slightly off-topic, I love grandfather clocks.

Anyone else like a classy clock???
 


Nitram

Well-known member
Jul 16, 2013
2,178
Bit obsessed but getting better.
Started off with an 1950’s Omega bumper when you could buy them for a £100. Then a Rolex Oysterdate 1956 for a few hundred. Still have them both, each are slow by about 5/10sec a day.
Had a nice full set Rolex GMT that I liked until they become really popular and valuable then I felt uncomfortable wearing it so sold it a few years back. Had a nice vintage Tudor submariner that was sold for the same reason.
Currently got a Seiko Skx007, (-10sec a day) modern Tudor sub, (+2) 1950’s Bulova given to wife who hasn’t a clue where it is, a Panerai plain dial homage that I never wear and a Rula made in East Germany in the 1970’s that has a nice retro look. My most recent purchase was an impulse purchase of a Chinese watch made by Pagani Design for just over a £100. This has to be one of the best bargains I’ve had, it’s constructed well and runs at 2 Sec fast a day.
I’ve also got a small collection of mantle and wall clocks that were gifts.
 
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Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
11,846
Cumbria
Slightly off-topic, I love grandfather clocks.

Anyone else like a classy clock???

Well - yes. Along with my pocket watch and fountain pens (see above) I have a beautiful chiming mantle clock that I bought in Farnham in 1996. When I say 'bought', I actually exchanged it in an antique shop for my five Nat West pigs - which at the time were worth something (you can get the set on ebay for about £30 now). It's still going strong and visitors love it. I found a looky likey in a book once, that dated it to somewhere like 1910.

Clock.JPG
 




Happy Exile

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Apr 19, 2018
1,869
Also got a Tudor Heritage Ranger and love it. My pride and joy though is a Tudor 79160 chronograph I built out of parts over a period of several years having picked up a box of watch bits at a car boot sale years ago and finding the dial in it and going from there. The case, dial and movement are original Tudor if from probably 5 different source watches, the hands are replacement ones - because it's a bit of a cannibal watch ("franken watch" is a term I've heard) it couldn't really be sold ever, but for the look of it and satisfaction it's the one I wear most. The crystal needs replacing as it's a bit cracked, so I'll probably get round to that in the summer.
 




Live by the sea

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2016
4,718
Auto but mechanical, I would never wear a quartz watch it just feels so wrong to me . Rolex datejust 2008 is my watch of choice , bought it from new and get it serviced every 3 years . Accurate to within 10 seconds over a period of a week .
 


zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
21,827
Sussex, by the sea
We did this thread a year or two ago didn't we?

I have a bit of both, Monaco needs a service . . . havent worn it for a few years . . . . is accurate withing a few seconds a day though. Have a £15 Tegrov oddity I found on ebay, gains a minute or two a day, but looks cool doing it.

have a few quartz jobbies as well, one a Christopher Ward which was a prize from racing via the HRDC, don't have a problem with them, they do a job.
 
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D

Deleted member 2719

Guest
Well - yes. Along with my pocket watch and fountain pens (see above) I have a beautiful chiming mantle clock that I bought in Farnham in 1996. When I say 'bought', I actually exchanged it in an antique shop for my five Nat West pigs - which at the time were worth something (you can get the set on ebay for about £30 now). It's still going strong and visitors love it. I found a looky likey in a book once, that dated it to somewhere like 1910.

View attachment 144230
Lovely.



It's strange how just a few decades ago these grand clocks would take centre stage in a house, now it's a 83" OLED 4k TV.

There is nothing like a chime from a special clock IMO.
 
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hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
61,345
Chandlers Ford
51483C87-90B0-4122-8541-C63AA975BD62.jpeg

Possibly loses a few seconds a week. No idea really - I pay no real attention to that.

(Note - I did take this photo ten minutes before posting it here - the watch hasn't lost ten minutes, since I last set it!)
 




zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
21,827
Sussex, by the sea
I remember seeing, a long time ago, a shirt with a hole in the cuff so when driving you could keep an eye on time whilst pressing on, or 'making time'
 


Normal Rob

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2003
5,662
Somerset
I wear a Tag Heuer Kirium. Nice little watch, not too big, and certainly not flash, but a decent watch none-the-less. It does seem to keep really good time, it if does lose/gain a few seconds I've certainly never noticed in 20 years of wearing. However as I often have to change the date at the start of the month, I probably reset it without ever really noticing.
 


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