So the first one has meanwhile received company. Great!
Thanks for sharing José.
Hi ho, I have taken a lot of pics of my seiko Marine chronometers:
More close up pics of the inside in here. I would be delighted if retired engineers would comments on the inside of the watches (feel free to link my pics to any comments you may have...):
http://s393.photobucket.com/albums/p...ko%20QC951-II/
http://s393.photobucket.com/albums/p...Seiko%20QM-10/
So the first one has meanwhile received company. Great!
Thanks for sharing José.
I really like the first one, thanks for sharing
Lovely, I have both of these also although the Crystal is defective, the adjustment trimmer has had the core poked through :( . It's still running but not keeping time, shouldn't be a major job to replace the trimmer though.
Eddie
Whole chunks of my life come under the heading "it seemed like a good idea at the time".
Very nice. Austere....and that is a good thing :P
I got the Crystal on Thursday. I started it and it was loosing 2 seconds per minute. I have been thinking over the weekend what was wrong. But today it was fine and it has kept the same time as the QM-10 since this morning, spot on. It seems the clock needed some time to work fine after, probably, being stored away for some time. Since the clock is running only at -2 sec from true time, I changed the hour and didn´t fiddle with the stop seconds. I love watches that self repair. I will keep my fingers closed, nevertheless.... :?Originally Posted by swanbourne
BTW if someone knows where can this be serviced, please let me know..I think seiko declines to work with them...
Might I ask where you sourced these, Jose?
The QM-10 on the web (the bay). The 951 from an Uk company dealing with second hand military vehicles...The first one, around 500 euros incl. shipping and the 951 around 800 euros incl. shipping.
Always admire the designs of these marine chronometers and really amazed to see see the insider. Thank you very much.
WOW, great technology. Lovely design.
do they come in automatic?
Brilliant. I love things like this!
That's great stuff José!
I hope getting them back in good nick will not be to big a problem.
Cheers,
Daddel.
Got a new watch, divers watch it is, had to drown the bastard to get it!
Thanks, Daddel. In fact it is running fine. The seller has apologised for not telling me that it was usual for these clocks to go astray for 24/48 hours before settling in. But at least if someone else has the same problem, they will know what to do: nothing.... :DOriginally Posted by Daddelvirks
No, modern marine chronometers are all quartz (although very recent ones are crap, I imagine modern ships rely in GPS/satelites so good timekeeping is not so necessary for good navigation). And anyway marine clocks are never automatic, but hand wound: you know, there is no wrist that can deal with the weight of these.... :wink:Originally Posted by emstudio