masraum |
08-27-2020 02:26 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by stuartj
(Post 11002330)
That was fantastic. Why these minature machines are endlessly fascinating. Thanks for posting.
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Absolutely. I remember, I think I was about 5 or 6. My grandfather had a big garage with a big work bench. It was an endless source of fascination and entertainment for me. One day, I see a bowl or ashtray with several watches in it. I grab a watch and ask "can I take this apart?" I don't think he was paying attention and said that I could. I took it out into the garage to the workbench. At that age, I didn't have the finesse, but I knew exactly where the hammer was. He came out and and saw all of the parts all over the floor. I don't remember what he said, but I don't think it was as angry as you might expect, probably something like "WHAT are you doing?" I responded "I asked you if I could take it apart and you said that I could." He completely dropped it. He had far more patience than I realized then, especially considering that he was probably 65-66 at the time, and knowing him, there was a chance that it wasn't a cheap watch.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill Douglas
(Post 11002334)
I wouldn't be able to remember where all the bits went back in.
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THAT'S the part that really gets me. But then if you've been inside enough watches, and you understand how they work, I'm sure it becomes familiar.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pwd72s
(Post 11002938)
Some very specialized tools, and the know-how to use them. I was impressed...even knowing how to replate.
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Very cool. Agreed on the stripping, polishing and replating.
One of my wife's relatives (grandmother's sister) passed away several years ago. The daughter was having an estate sale and selling off some family items, so we went to see if my wife could get them (great grandparents crystal, etc...). I perused the garaged and discovered/determined that the guy had apparently worked on clocks or watches. There were a few interesting little items in his garage. There were some odd round punches, that I'm pretty sure were for punching brass where a hole had enlarged to shrink the hole again, and a few other interesting tidbits that appeared to relate to working on clocks or watches.
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