Bill Hughes
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- North Texas
What is an acceptable amount of time loss or gain over a 24 hour period before getting a watch serviced?
I'd say, it has to be serviced/repaired...Say a watch loses 2 minutes over a 24 hour period - I’d say it’s fine
I agree with it just needs a cleaning and lube. Old oil gums up and drags. from my experiences, springs rarely go bad on well made old watches. get it cleaned and enjoy it. Ive got several old family watches, and if I can keep them to a minute or so a day Im happyI'd say, it has to be serviced/repaired...
Chances are, that it has to be cleaned and oiled. If not cleaned, it will wear and things get worse, likely making a repair necessary, translating to higher costs. Cleaning and oiling is a standard service which is usually not expensive if not cheap. This extends the lifespan of any mechanical watch.
Although it is funny, that this old thread resurfaces after two years, I like it to see that there is still someone interested in this kind of stuff here on the lounge. My oldest watch is a 1815 dated english pocket watch made by the typical Coventry co-up which employed the so called apprenticeship system. It was made for the American Market and bears a typical Pseudo Maker's name. It is a fine watch however and I had it "restored" by a watchmaker specialized in old english watches. It runs it's full chain in 31 hours and loses or gains in total less than 5 minutes in 24 hours in a face up position on my desk. When I wear it (I don't) it is unpredictable how much it loses or gains. But not more than 15 minutes I'd say based on my trials. These are fantastic numbers for a verge fusee watch of this kind with a regulator of it's type.For a mechanical watch that i am winding everyday i wouldn’t care if i lost 5 min a day. I’d just reset it. For an automatic 10-15 sec a day is fine. I reset my the watch i’m wearing to the exact time every sunday because i enjoy doing it.