Mine wouldn't even be close to opening enough. Maybe if you had a really big set. Those notches are almost 1.5" apart.Use circlip pliers with 90 degree tips.
Since you don't have a root cause of why the other movement is eating gears, I would not keep throwing parts at it. While this movement may not survive stem surgery, maybe it will and you will sure as hell learn a lot along the way.So when I got my latest arrival of parts I noticed that the tin namoki sends the parts in had a large dent in it. Didn't think much about it until I opened up the movement for my Seiko Pepsi....
That is half the stem sitting in the movement. It snapped off during shipping. Tried a few things to get it out unsuccessfully, however namoki says they are sending out a new one, but based on my last orders, its 4 weeks out . Great customer support by them though
Now here is the next question, do I swap the little plastic gear off this movement onto my original movement that has broken two so far, or attempt to fully disassemble and remove the stem? I have 5% confidence in either of the two options working
True.Since you don't have a root cause of why the other movement is eating gears, I would not keep throwing parts at it. While this movement may not survive stem surgery, maybe it will and you will sure as hell learn a lot along the way.
Interesting. I'm not sure I love the bark instead of the flutes but it is nice to see something different. Too expensive for me to wear as a daily but if the style works for you a really awesome watch to wear on special occasions to bring back memories.I inherited this Rolex from my Father, I'm afraid to even wear it, so I just look at it alot
I can have a drowned seiko if I want. The cool timepieces may dad had got stolen by a punk kid. Jealous of those that got quality pieces being passed down.
I inherited this Rolex from my Father, I'm afraid to even wear it, so I just look at it alot
@48Connor maybe you can help guide me through my stuck button issue I posted earlier.
What other kit do you have to take it apart and how in the heck do you keep all the parts in order?
I'd use a winder if I had a few autos in heavy rotation but off for longer than they had power. Grabbing a watch that is ready to go is nice. No way am I leaving one spinning for weeks or months just in case I wanted to wear it.I wind every watch in the box once per month and let them run down. My watch repair guy said never use an auto winder, his thing was “ do you leave your motorcycle running when it’s sitting in the garage for a week?” And he gets paid to fix worn out watches ….
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Just had a full service, I also have the original box and all the paper work, my Dad bought the watch around 1974They're like motorcycles. They don't take kindly to sitting idle for long periods. I'd get it serviced or at least have someone pop the hood and give you an opinion on it's condition then put it on a winder so it's always running.
If I had the JDM Seiko my father bought in Japan years ago I'd wear it. Can't think of anything more fitting.