My thought is the amount of play or backlash on the center wheel (or whatever wheel the second hand hooks up to).
There are two different situations...
In a watch like a Speedmaster where the constant seconds is directly driven, you don’t want it to run backwards. The geometry of the escape wheel and pallet fork stones are not meant to go backwards.
On an indirectly driven sweep seconds hand, like in a Cal. 564, it’s possible that the hand moving backwards where it sort of flies backwards as you adjust the time, is the backlash between the drive wheel (third wheel in this case), and the sweep seconds pinion. In this scenario it’s not “ticking” backwards but jumping back several seconds all at once. This is not really a problem...
Hi @Archer, indeed, in my case scenario, most off the time it is jumping backward « all at once » but once I’ve seen it ticking backward 2 or 3 seconds à fêter junmping and before ticking clockwise again.
so, in this case, should I bring it back in order to get the cannon pinion less tight?
Hello everyone,
I am a proud Speedy Pro owner since 2019, previously only lurking on here and reading posts with great interest.
I have a somewhat related question/problem:
A few days ago I adjusted the time on my Speedy Pro to reflect the daylight saving time and put it back in my watch box.
The next day I picked it up and noticed that I forgot to push the crown back in its default position. Instead it was in its "set time" position for about 20 hours and the second hand had stopped when I picked it up...
I pushed the crown in and it's been running fine since then.
Do I have to be worried about any damage to the movement?
Thank you in advance!
Greetings from Germany
Eddie
No, you are fine. When you pull the crown out, the parts of the winding system that move the hand when you turn the crown, are moved into a configuration where they are all connected to the crown. The watch stops because now the power in the watch is actually trying to move all those parts as it runs, including turning the crown on the case tube, and there just isn't enough power to do that.
Depending on how tight the seal inside the crown is, some watches may carry on running, and others will stop - neither is doing any harm to the watch.
Cheers, Al
"Also turning the hands backwards in time does not create any problems for most watches."
Except for maybe tuning fork watches? i had one turned back in time and it stopped working after that. Noob mistake.![]()