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Old 7 November 2020, 07:51 PM   #1
kctt
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Interesting quirk on my AP Diver

I've had the watch from new for 10 years now and found an interesting quirk that I never knew. These days, the watch is hardly worn and sits in the watch drawer.

Two days ago, I decided to set the time to the 10:10 position. At this time, the watch does not have any power reserve left. I don't remember the position of the hour and minute hands, just that I set it to 10:10. When I screwed the crown back on, I noticed the watch was ticking. I didn't move the watch that much to have caused the rotor to wind the watch. Hmmm... maybe the mainspring hasn't fully unwound I thought. Strange.

The next morning, the watch stopped running but the time showed 4 o'clock! Means the watch was actually ticking for 6 hours! I then set it to 10:10 again but this time was careful not to move the watch at all. Again, the watch was ticking after I screwed the crown. This morning, I found the watch showing around the half past 4 mark again! I repeated the exercise and this time watch stopped just before 5 o'clock. Seems like the watch runs for around 6 hours each time.

Before you guys say anything, I didn't wind the watch, it was on the set time position. What do you think happened here? I'm keen to hear if anyone came across this before.
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Old 7 November 2020, 08:08 PM   #2
mnl
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kctt View Post
I've had the watch from new for 10 years now and found an interesting quirk that I never knew. These days, the watch is hardly worn and sits in the watch drawer.

Two days ago, I decided to set the time to the 10:10 position. At this time, the watch does not have any power reserve left. I don't remember the position of the hour and minute hands, just that I set it to 10:10. When I screwed the crown back on, I noticed the watch was ticking. I didn't move the watch that much to have caused the rotor to wind the watch. Hmmm... maybe the mainspring hasn't fully unwound I thought. Strange.

The next morning, the watch stopped running but the time showed 4 o'clock! Means the watch was actually ticking for 6 hours! I then set it to 10:10 again but this time was careful not to move the watch at all. Again, the watch was ticking after I screwed the crown. This morning, I found the watch showing around the half past 4 mark again! I repeated the exercise and this time watch stopped just before 5 o'clock. Seems like the watch runs for around 6 hours each time.

Before you guys say anything, I didn't wind the watch, it was on the set time position. What do you think happened here? I'm keen to hear if anyone came across this before.

isn’t it a screw down crown? i’m guessing while setting the crown back in the locked position it’s getting wound up enough to run for a few hours
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Old 7 November 2020, 08:21 PM   #3
kctt
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isn’t it a screw down crown? i’m guessing while setting the crown back in the locked position it’s getting wound up enough to run for a few hours
When I screw the crown back, I push it to feel the thread before screwing it back on. I'm almost certain at the point where I start the screwing down, the action doesn't wind the watch?
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Old 7 November 2020, 10:24 PM   #4
NutNut
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I agree with @mnl in that the watch winds when you screw the crown back into the lock position. I have a Dual Time with a power meter and noticed that the hand goes up 2 or 3 ticks when locking it. This gives it about 3 or so hours of running time.


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Old 8 November 2020, 06:49 AM   #5
dcash0615
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isn’t it a screw down crown? i’m guessing while setting the crown back in the locked position it’s getting wound up enough to run for a few hours
This
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Old 8 November 2020, 01:35 PM   #6
kctt
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mnl View Post
isn’t it a screw down crown? i’m guessing while setting the crown back in the locked position it’s getting wound up enough to run for a few hours
Quote:
Originally Posted by NutNut View Post
I agree with @mnl in that the watch winds when you screw the crown back into the lock position. I have a Dual Time with a power meter and noticed that the hand goes up 2 or 3 ticks when locking it. This gives it about 3 or so hours of running time.


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You are both right. I've repeated the same experiment without setting the time. Just by screwing the crown back on, gives enough juice for the watch to run for 5 hours. Learnt something new today. Cheers fellas.
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Old 11 November 2020, 10:52 AM   #7
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You are both right. I've repeated the same experiment without setting the time. Just by screwing the crown back on, gives enough juice for the watch to run for 5 hours. Learnt something new today. Cheers fellas.

I had indeed noticed the phenomenon - but great to have the duration quantified as I was always curious about that.
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