This is so amazing to hear you talk about aspects of watchmaking that most of us have never considered. It provides an entirely new appreciation for these machines on our wrist. Thank you for sharing your passion and expertise with all of us Cameron, this is amazing.
Those are pretty nifty! I thought you would have to sit there with a jeweler's loupe and some needle files and dress the part haha! This must be extremely time consuming and imagine you scratch the bridge or something halfway through... As always thanks for sharing and happy new year to you and yours for 2024!
Wow, very educational. I think it is great the way you educate your audience. You are a great teacher and your love of your profession comes across well. Your clients are fortunate. It's obvious you are into more than just selling a timepiece. The amount of knowledge and dexterity that go into this is overwhelming. You are truly amazing.
Hi Cameron, One of the machines I programme and operate is a Multiturn lathe which allows the operator to machine in full CNC mode but which also allows manual inputs which would be ideal in the case of deburring parts in your particularly precise environment, do your lathes have this capability?. I would imagine you have researched deburring tumbling machines I realise the media for this might be problematic but even talcum powder is an abrasive, if you could find a suitable media it might be worth a look. Once again a great video, best wishes, Mal.
is it really the case that hand-deburring is the only option in so many of these cases? how are the large-volume producers deburring, like Sellita and ETA?
Money well spent on this video series. There’s nothing like it on the internet. Excellent from a marketing standpoint also.
This is so amazing to hear you talk about aspects of watchmaking that most of us have never considered. It provides an entirely new appreciation for these machines on our wrist. Thank you for sharing your passion and expertise with all of us Cameron, this is amazing.
I'm so glad you enjoyed it! That is really the goal with the series.
Another amazing example of attention to detail. The difference between great and exceptional. Thanks for sharing your insights
Holy shit!! you deserve way more subs for this sort of content, keep going my man.
Thank you! Working on that
I loved listening to you and Matt Farah on the Watch and Listen podcast! It's so great to have you back!
Yay, thank you!
Amazing, thank you
Those are pretty nifty! I thought you would have to sit there with a jeweler's loupe and some needle files and dress the part haha! This must be extremely time consuming and imagine you scratch the bridge or something halfway through... As always thanks for sharing and happy new year to you and yours for 2024!
Love this series. Be sure to add your website in the description of each video. Subscribed!
Thank you! Will do!
Wow, very educational. I think it is great the way you educate your audience. You are a great teacher and your love of your profession comes across well. Your clients are fortunate. It's obvious you are into more than just selling a timepiece. The amount of knowledge and dexterity that go into this is overwhelming. You are truly amazing.
Wow, thank you!
All I can say is WOW!
The picture of the escapement wheel on a finger at 6:16 says it all about the connection between Man and Machine.
Yes, so glad you appreciated that moment.
This is great, the process IS the product. Keep it up!
Thanks, will do!
Love these videos :-) Just look at the watch - and You can feel the quality. Love my 42 mm latte dial!
Glad you enjoy it!
Dude! This is so good.
Thank you! Looking forward to seeing you soon, Chris.
Wow incredible😍,but how long does it take to get a finished main plate?
Hi Cameron, One of the machines I programme and operate is a Multiturn lathe which allows the operator to machine in full CNC mode but which also allows manual inputs which would be ideal in the case of deburring parts in your particularly precise environment, do your lathes have this capability?.
I would imagine you have researched deburring tumbling machines I realise the media for this might be problematic but even talcum powder is an abrasive, if you could find a suitable media it might be worth a look. Once again a great video, best wishes, Mal.
At the microscopic level, all machining is a brutal process. One has to decide what level of deburring to go down to.
is it really the case that hand-deburring is the only option in so many of these cases? how are the large-volume producers deburring, like Sellita and ETA?
Ty
All these guys who just tear them down, clean , and reassemble, and call themselves watchmakers. Like me, we're just watch technician's.