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seconds hand "Click" to Login or Register 
Picture of Frank Juchniewicz
posted
Is there a method used to replace a seconds hand that has come off its pipe. Whomever put the seconds hand on really forced it down.In lifting it off,I parted the hand from its pipe.



Frank

Frank Juchniewicz
 
Posts: 440 | Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA | Registered: January 28, 2003
posted
Hey Frank, You know my universal cureall. Superglue--works for this too. Work under the loupe, use a needle tip to apply the glue and set it together. This will hold it while on the watch, but when you attempt to remove it the next time, the bond will break.

Tom
 
Posts: 1060 | Registered: March 10, 2003
posted
Framk, What is the hand for? Maybe I can help. I dont know any way to repair it.

Aaron
 
Posts: 945 | Location: Geneva, Illinois in the U.S.A. | Registered: November 19, 2002
Watch Repair Expert
posted
Insert a round "smoothing broach" into the hole in the tube to keep from crushing it, and then insert the tube into a lathe collet of the proper size. Shoulder the tube to fit through the seconds hand about twice the thickness of the hand, then remove the tube from the lathe, place the seconds hand on the tube, and swell the extended end of the tube (carefully) with a sharp pointed punch. Once it's swelled a bit, tap it lightly with a flat-faced stake to finish the rivet.

A new tube can be made in essentially the same way. On occasion, I've had to make extra-long ones from hypodermic needles, etc......

That's all there is to it (the sketch below should help).

==================

Steve Maddox
Past President, NAWCC Chapter #62
North Little Rock, Arkansas
IHC Charter Member 49

 
Posts: 618 | Location: North Little Rock, Arkansas USA | Registered: December 05, 2002
Picture of Frank Juchniewicz
posted
Aaron, the hand is off of a Waltham 18s,model 83,A.T.@co.

Tom and Steve, thanks for the two diffrent approaches to solving this problem.I will let you all know how I made out.


Frank

Frank Juchniewicz
 
Posts: 440 | Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA | Registered: January 28, 2003
IHC President
Life Member
Picture of Lindell V. Riddle
posted

Excellent explanation Steve!

We are to the point where we must preserve and repair these increasingly difficult to obtain second hands.

This is a very big help.

Lindell


Wink
 
Posts: 10553 | Location: Northeastern Ohio in the USA | Registered: November 19, 2002
Watch Repair Expert
posted
Lindell writes: "We are to the point where we must preserve and repair these increasingly difficult to obtain second hands."

Agreed!

Never throw away a nice seconds hand just because the tube is ruined or detached. The hand itself is the essential part, and new tubes can always be made and fitted.

============

SM
 
Posts: 618 | Location: North Little Rock, Arkansas USA | Registered: December 05, 2002
Picture of Frank Juchniewicz
posted
The seconds hand has been repaired,and is now holding on to the end of the fourth wheel,happily going in a circle. Upon close inspection,I found that the pipe originally must have been to big; the cure used, was to pinch it closed. But in doing so the pipe was inadvertently bent slightly.
Then forced on. The cure involved the use of: smoothing broach,flat faced stake,and one of my wife's hand sewing needles. Those little pipes are hard to work on.


Frank

Frank Juchniewicz
 
Posts: 440 | Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA | Registered: January 28, 2003
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