CaliforniaJed[Purist]
5145
More, more, more!
Mar 12, 2009,13:40 PM
These posts are fantastic but they always leave me wanting to see more! What a treat it is to be invited to the wedding of art and science, and what a delightful union they are forming.
Thanks for another great post.
Best,
Jed
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The Making of the Dresdener Regulator, Part 3 of 4
By: Kong : March 12th, 2009-09:13
Please Click here for Part 1 Please click here for Part 2 More Parts Finishing Parts finishing continues with the wheels. Here we see the wheels as delivered by ETA, the form stamped, the teeth cut and then flash gold plated to prevent corrosion; quality ...
Fascinating..
By: BDLJ : March 12th, 2009-20:19
Great report, Kong and Fantastic work, Don. One question. The crown, what material is it? I may have missed it in the text, but the only reason I can think of for casting before machining is that it's a precious metal of some sort, hence the need to minim...
Casting
By: DonCorson : March 13th, 2009-12:30
Hi BDLJ ! The reason I do casting is because after casting the work that remains is simple turning and hand work. I do not need a big CNC for a quarter of a million with a complicated program to mill the case or even the 10s of thousands of CHF of investm...
very cool! a question and a comment
By: ei8htohms : March 12th, 2009-20:22
Hi Don, This is a great series and highlights how much work you're putting into these pieces. Keep up the good work! How do you maintain or re-establish concentricity between the pinions and wheels after dismounting/remounting them? Do you top the wheels ...
Wheels
By: DonCorson : March 13th, 2009-12:11
Hi John, I have not had problems with concentricity after restaking the wheels. I chuck them on the pinions in the lathe and check for that. A big problem is that they are no longer really flat and it takes forever to get them flat again. As far as I can ...
Thanks very much Kong and Don! Another question for Don,
By: AnthonyTsai : March 12th, 2009-21:01
Will you ever try gilt frosted finishing like on Greubel Forsey watches instead of geneva stripes? Just wondering. Some people like the frosted finishing better (I'm not one of them) so thought I'd ask this in case you ever make a custom ordered watch in ...
Pure poetry
By: Ophiuchus : March 14th, 2009-02:54
To actually see the work you put into each piece is a glorious thing indeed. To me, it's mechanical poetry in motion- always striving for that moment when the true surface of the parts is found. Just like hitting the final facet on my stones, you must rea...