Jump to content

Where have all the mainsprings gone...long time passing...


Recommended Posts

25 minutes ago, RichardHarris123 said:

Make/ modify but yes, sad. It's not just mainsprings, all parts are getting rare . In the future, the only option will be to make your own. 

Method for making some things is well established (staffs, wheels...) but I know of no established method for making a mainspring.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, LittleWatchShop said:

Pretty sure nobody is making mainsprings for vintage watches

you need to define vintage watch?

one of the interesting problems of mainsprings would be is look at the GR catalog in the back of the mainsprings listed by size. You go through each of the pages counting how many mainsprings are listed you find that at one time there were a heck of a lot of mainsprings. the problem is if you stocked all those mainsprings how fast would it take to go through them?

Then of course the Swiss have changed the manufacturing to only manufacturer for what they currently need. mainsprings were probably be like hairsprings no longer made in a generic fashion but only made for the specific consumer because I don't want to stock stuff that's not going to turn over instantly.

But that doesn't mean you can't get mainsprings. Many years ago there is a crisis over American pocket watch springs from the Swiss and what happened the material houses pooled their resources to place orders big enough that the manufacturer did manufacture  American pocket watch Springs. Unfortunately they did not purchase a lifetime supply of those Springs.

then I'm assuming if the demand is high enough like for instance Rolex somebody will manufacture a mainspring which is why we have aftermarket mainsprings.

But you really don't have to worry anymore if your vintage mainspring is blued steel no problem it can be? I'm going to give you an image from the discussion found at the link below apparently there's a procedure for blued steel Springs to bring them back to life so as long as is not broken no need to ever change the mainspring? although if it's not a blued steel spring I guess you're out of luck.

image.thumb.png.8b39291caa50b733c3e0893b8f34da8b.png

https://mb.nawcc.org/threads/new-to-pocket-watches-new-main-spring-question.216027/

2 hours ago, LittleWatchShop said:

Method for making some things is well established (staffs, wheels...) but I know of no established method for making a mainspring.

because you need heavy equipment. if you are making individual spring is you need a way of rolling out the wire so you need a rolling mill then you'd need a method of a controlled furnace and of course the right steel. It seems like there should be something in one of the vintage books I know I have books and talk about how to make a new hairspring it seems like the principal should be similar just bigger?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, Kalanag said:

See here:

Making Hairsprings

I‘s a big one, made in a so called „home shop“. The procedure should be applicable for main springs.

Impressive! I think you are right.

7 hours ago, JohnR725 said:

I'm going to give you an image from the discussion found at the link below

Yeah, I read that on NAWCC the other day.  Perhaps that is what got my mind to ponder the topic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Does anything appear when you pull the crown to the setting position? Maybe it was a split stem that was damaged and someone's replaced it and the marks on the dial are where they held the stem while screwing the crown on?
    • I'm convinced it's a front loader.  There are no seams whatsoever on the back. I've been wrong before though... Here's where I am, loosened the clamp 100%, then brought it back to the second step on the glass.  The watch dropped down, as you said.  I then examined that it was uniformly even around the glass.  Tightened it to one hand tight.  Tried a pull and could see the clamp slip.  Then tightened to uncomfortable tight with two hands.  I begin to be nervous.  Pull at the clamp, and same thing, the clamp slips of the glass (not all the way, I'm using small movements).  Tighten a little more, now I can rotate the glass...  Just a little...  Risk tightening further? Your trick did it!!!  It's off. Ok, I examined around the dial, looking for something that might indicate how to get the stem off and the movement out.  I see no lever.  What I observe is damage to the dial right next to the stem, no where else.  It looks like tweezers pressed up against that dial, causing the indentation.  My thought is the crown needs to be removed?
    • A friend of a friend has entrusted me with the service/restoration of what was his grandfather's Breitling Navitimer 806. It was just lying around in a drawer, missing its glass and two of the hands, but incredibly it runs and the Chrono seems to function.    I've started dismantling it and have learned that I'm not the worst amateur watch fixer in the world - the dial had been glued down!  I'm planning to strip down and clean the movement - I should be competent to do that. Clean and re-lume the hands. Source a new glass - acrylic I think - and do very little to the dial apart from maybe a cotton bud and water.    Any advice from the good people here before I crack on? I did tell him the potential value of this and suggest he might get a proper watch maker to sort it. I've offered no guarantees apart from I shouldn't make it worse. 
    • Good stuff! Glad we could help
×
×
  • Create New...