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26 November 2015, 01:29 AM | #1 |
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question on power reserve
Assume your watch has stopped. You set it and give it 1 wind to start it and then put it on and wear it doing vigourous activity for days and night.
I have read here that wearing it will just keep it at the power reserve it was before you started wearing it. I thought that wearing it would wind it to the point of a full wind (the equivalent of 40 turns of the crown). Would appreciate the correct answer from someone who knows. |
26 November 2015, 01:32 AM | #2 |
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The watch will continue to run while you wear it (probably). It will not wind any more from wearing it (even vigorously).
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26 November 2015, 01:40 AM | #3 | |
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You can do this experiment. Start with just 1 wind as you said and then wear for a week or so and then see how long it takes before it stops. |
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26 November 2015, 01:58 AM | #4 |
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I have a Ball watch with a power reserve indicator--which make answering this question much easier--and it will wind from active movement. One day I slipped into a lower pocket of some cargo pants where it got a lot of action. The power reserve showed that it was topped off in a couple of hours. I love that complication and am seriously thinking of getting a North Flag as well.
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26 November 2015, 03:03 AM | #5 |
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When my Submariner of Daytona has stopped running it needs at least 10-15 full winds to start the movement.
Besides that I always give it about 40-45 full winds when I start wearing a watch which has stopped running. When wearing the watch after that it will be fully wound for around 2 days when you stop wearing the watch.
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26 November 2015, 03:03 AM | #6 | |
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I've heard this said a few times but I don't understand it. Imagine watch fully wound = 100% Watch is then left on bedside cabinet for 10 hours. Let's just say for a figure that this reduces the stored energy by 10%. So watch is now 90% fully wound up. Watch then worn all day so no more energy loss then again left on cabinet at night and losses another 10% of original full wind up. So now, after two lots of sitting on cabinet for 10 hours, it's at 80% or original full wind. If this carries on, after about 10 to 12 nights of watch lying on cabinet the watch would stop if it did not recover some of it's lost 'wind' wouldn't it? Well mine hasn't! Surely this shows that movement while wearing the watch does actually restore some energy back into the spring and winds the watch up? Even when being worn but not moving, such as at night, a watch will loose energy and if this is not replaced by movement the watch will stop in a relatively short time. I wore my first Rolex for about a year before I heard that it 'should' be wound every so often so surely it should have stopped long before this if movement does not restore energy? |
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26 November 2015, 03:10 AM | #7 |
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When you first put it on give it about 25 turns you'll be good.
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26 November 2015, 03:13 AM | #8 |
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don't think just wearing it gives it a full wind. I guess depending on activity and movement level theoretically it could
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26 November 2015, 03:19 AM | #9 | |
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26 November 2015, 04:04 AM | #10 | |
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26 November 2015, 04:10 AM | #11 |
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It can potentially get up to a full wind just by wearing it. This of course depends on your activity level.
Anyone that states it will not gain any wind just by wearing has obviously never worn a watch with a power reserve complication. |
26 November 2015, 04:52 AM | #12 |
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Interesting the difference of opinions on a subject that has a definitive answer.
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26 November 2015, 05:35 AM | #13 |
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Here is an example of why just wearing the watch with one wind is not optimal. It is much more productive to wind an automatic watch via the crown. That is all I was saying.
http://www.bernardwatch.com/blog/why...ith-the-crown/ |
26 November 2015, 05:58 AM | #14 | |
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I have heard a few people say that movement when wearing an automatic watch can not increase the energy stored but, as I have said, I do not understand how this can be correct. |
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26 November 2015, 06:03 AM | #15 |
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I have always been under the impression that just wearing an automatic will not increase the power reserve. If I am incorrect, then I can accept that.
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26 November 2015, 06:26 AM | #16 |
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No problem at all, I just wonder why people think this.
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26 November 2015, 08:57 AM | #17 | |
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It takes about 650 turns of the rotor (through wrist action) to maintain power reserve (zero loss, zero gain) If you are active enough to give it 700 turns daily, it will eventually wind it fully - but with that sort of gearing it will take a looooong time, perhaps weeks. Likewise, if you only give it 600 turns daily, it will slowly run down because you are not putting as much into it as it is consuming to stay running.. It will eventually reach parity and stop on your wrist.. It ain't magic, it's physics..
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26 November 2015, 10:04 AM | #18 |
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This has an easy answer, I have an Orient with a power reserve indicator that can't be manually wound. Starting from zero and earing it and taking it off at night, it would wind progressively up to full wind by the middle of the second day. This watch can not be hand wound you can only wind it up by wearing it.
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26 November 2015, 11:00 AM | #19 |
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My IWC Big Pilot will go from one day power reserve to a full seven with approx three days of normal wear.
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26 November 2015, 01:21 PM | #20 |
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Some manufacturers are geared differently, especially those that do not have an active winding crown.
These watches will auto-wind faster, but the trade off is that they will rotate the mainspring in the barrel if they are always over-wound, essentially wearing out the mainspring barrel. It's a trade-off in manufacturing and engineering design. All watch movements are not the same..
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26 November 2015, 03:33 PM | #21 |
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My 14060m (weekday watch) will wind up from zero PR to full PR on my wrist during one day out on site.
Other results may vary.
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26 November 2015, 04:02 PM | #22 |
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26 November 2015, 05:18 PM | #23 |
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When I take it off on Friday nights at around 4.30pm home time it will run until about 1.00pm Sunday.
On a full manual wind it runs for just over 45 hrs.
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26 November 2015, 07:36 PM | #24 | |
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Is it just me? I don't get these power reserve questions? I have numerous Rolex watches (bought my 1st in'82) and never had an issue in all that time. Wear it..... it's wound |
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26 November 2015, 07:41 PM | #25 |
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26 November 2015, 07:48 PM | #26 | |
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27 November 2015, 01:46 AM | #27 |
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I wore my first Rolex (a Datejust) for years and never wound it, ever. I remember my Mom, who had given it to me as a gift, and herself had worn Rolex for years, telling me to just shake my wrist to wind it up. And that's what I did... for probably ten years... until the Internet was invented. Then I joined a forum where I became obsessed with Rolex and learned that they could actually be wound up manually!
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27 November 2015, 05:11 AM | #28 |
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27 November 2015, 06:34 AM | #29 | |
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18 June 2018, 07:35 AM | #30 | |
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...sorry 'bout tagging on to an old post...but this was Pg 6 of 21..starting from the Oldest.. . .. .....Only because I was searching about 'what effect, if any, would a 'service' to a DJ have, ( new mainspring etc..), with regards to Power Reserve. Would a new mainspring etal, have an effect on the Power Reserve..? I'm running a 'test' now to see how that turns out...after my DJ service... . ..Re Winding..." When I tested my Rolexes for power reserve, I wound them 90 times, just to be absolutely sure they were fully wound. As a normal wind isn't usually a full 360 wind, I would recommend at least 60. Whatever, you can't overwind it".. . .- .90 seems like a reasonable way to go, since it's difficult to turn the crown a Full 360 degrees in one motion, between your thumb and forefinger... (as most do)..! - Just a thought...
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