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20 October 2010, 01:46 AM | #1 |
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Self-Winding Question
I've always wondered: Does my Rolex self-winding movement ever wind the watch fully? I realize that the mechanism winds continuously throughout the day as it's being worn, but it's also winding down simultaneously as the watch runs. After 8 hours of normal wear, it it fully wound? When I say "fully wound," I mean as if I manually wound the watch with 25-30 turns of the crown.
I hope this is not a silly question, but since the self-winding action is virtually undetectable to the wearer, it's somewhat mysterious! |
20 October 2010, 01:50 AM | #2 |
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After 40 winds, it should be fully wound.
Your movement, depending on how active, will top off the watch's power reserve. As you become less active, I would imagine the watch would run down. What has bothered me in the past is having the watch always topped off (on a winder). I can imagine the mainspring would have a "flat spot" (like in a parked car in the same position for a long time) if it's always in the same expansion range. Sorry if this added to the confusion.
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20 October 2010, 01:50 AM | #3 | |
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20 October 2010, 01:55 AM | #4 | |
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20 October 2010, 02:22 AM | #5 |
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From a dead start my EXP-II (3185) will wind fully after about 30 full winds, then you can discern (feel) the clutch slipping. During the night I leave it crown down for regulation, the next day manual winding after wearing about one hour produces immediate slipping, indicating a fully wound system. So I would say yes from my experience.
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