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9 December 2018, 02:57 AM | #1 |
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Location: Abu Dhabi, UAE/AZ
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40 turns slows my watch down!
3 month old new YM 116622, arrived from TS running, wore it immediately, (disabled and not very active), put on winder nightly for 700-800 rotations. Running about a half second slow daily. Come to December 1, set date, and since I had the crown pulled out, gave it the forty full turns, something I almost never do.
Now it’s running one and a half seconds slow. What happened? Yes, I know it’s within spec., but liked it better at only half second slow.
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116622 1680, 16233, 113400 retired |
9 December 2018, 03:25 AM | #2 |
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Real Name: Jesus
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Hmm
I’m curious to see what other members think as well. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
9 December 2018, 03:44 AM | #3 |
2024 ROLEX DATEJUST41 Pledge Member
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Bay Area, CA
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Perhaps try storing overnight (off the winder) flat w/ dial facing up. It will speed it up. Observe from there. But 1spd in any direction is very very good!
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9 December 2018, 04:07 AM | #4 |
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The "emptiness" of the power reserve can actually make your watch run a little faster. So, when you topped off the reserve, you restored the watch to its true timekeeping settings.
But really...is .5 second/day worth the concern? |
9 December 2018, 04:19 AM | #5 |
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Yeah, it's not that your watch is running slower with a full PR -- it's that your watch runs a little fast when the PR is low. When there's less power pushing the movement, each tick is a teeny tiny bit shorter, which speeds up the watch.
So, you can either try to keep the PR low, find a night-time position that speeds it up a little to compensate, or convince Rolex to regulate the watch. They might, actually, since consistency over the PR is supposed to fall within a certain range. |
9 December 2018, 04:23 AM | #6 | |
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Quote:
Just for curiosity sake, I’ll let it run down and see if there’s any difference. Thanks for the information.
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9 December 2018, 04:26 AM | #7 |
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Real Name: Mike
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Same thing happened to mine.
Bought new DJ41 in late June, and basically just wore it. It ran 1/3 second fast a day, consistently for 2 months. I gave it a full wind, and it runs a little over 2 seconds slow a day now. Went on vacation, let it die, wound it up, same thing, a bit over 2 seconds a day slow. It's been exactly a week (7 days since I wound it) it's about 17 seconds slow. Not a biggie, but it is weird. It does make sense though. Anyone think that Rolex sets these to run at minus 2 per day, expecting them to, as they age and lose amplitude/speed up, to move to spot on and then eventually plus 2 a day? Seems plausible. They're very consistent, despite being a bit slow. Consistently slow. :) |
9 December 2018, 06:33 AM | #8 |
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My 1680 Sub ran about 3 seconds fast for forty years. Never wound it, lap swam regularly so it didn’t need a hand wind. When I began to rotate with a second Rolex, it was on a winder for 750 rotations on days it wasn’t worn. When I retired it, it was about 3 minutes a month fast. Excellent performance IMHO.
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9 December 2018, 11:45 AM | #9 |
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It seems like maybe the air pressure or humidity may have some effect on the watch. It’s waterproof but can the air still get in/out?
I have also noticed that the rate deviates a little bit from the trend every time I set the date. I don’t wind my GMT, but have brought it a few times to the AD and they wound it. Seems to be the watchmaker habit. It appears to have affected the rate a bit as well. I was checking the rate every day so it is pretty solid evidence I have. |
9 December 2018, 12:45 PM | #10 |
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They're mechanical watches running superbly well; give them a break.....or buy quartz. The precision Rolex achieve is remarkable,,but always limited by the nature of the beast.
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9 December 2018, 02:10 PM | #11 | |
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Quote:
Maybe you missed my statements:”Excellent performance IMHO”. “not really a concern “.
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9 December 2018, 03:13 PM | #12 | |||||
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I don't think anyone is "concerned." Just interested in how watches work. |
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9 December 2018, 03:18 PM | #13 |
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Real Name: Eddie
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Would a fully wound watch have more amplitude and this slows it down.
Would an almost unwound watch have less amplitude and this speeds it up? Or does air pressure and humidity seem a more likely cause? Posts 3 & 4 sort of nailed it.
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9 December 2018, 04:21 PM | #14 |
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Yes !!!
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