Poljot Posted December 17, 2020 Posted December 17, 2020 On 12/14/2020 at 3:55 AM, Marc said: http://members.iinet.net.au/~fotoplot/rgold/rgold.html No Gold, eh? But this 1944 Omega still looks like gold! Yellow gold & pink gold with a metal insert that also looks like gold (says metal). Such a lovely design! 1
Ronp Posted December 19, 2020 Posted December 19, 2020 To improve the accuray of measuring the thickness of a mainspring take 3 or 4 winding together and divide the measurement by 3 or 4. Easy and more accurate. 2
Poljot Posted December 19, 2020 Posted December 19, 2020 2 hours ago, Ronp said: To improve the accuray of measuring the thickness of a mainspring take 3 or 4 winding together and divide the measurement by 3 or 4. Easy and more accurate. Good old trick :-)! I went one step further by taking measurements in-situ before removing an old mainspring. There is always at least one good spots to stick in the caliper's jaws while mainspring is still inside the barrel :-). Then divide by 10, 11, etc and voila! Measuring just one "coil" with such caliper as shown below (in mm) is not always appropriate. How do you measure 0.125mm mainspring when your caliper has some limitations with resolution and jumps from 0.12mm to 0.13mm? Right, you measure 2 coils. 1
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