From Russia with... oil?

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • Today we are working on an old Soviet watch, a Pobeda ("Victory") watch from 1973 according to one of our knowledgeable viewers! It doesn't seem to run even when fully wound but then changes its mind, and we'll soon find out why it was reluctant to start in the first place... There will be some bad Russian accents, a few bad Russian words that I hope no one will learn and a few other digressions along the way!
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    bit.ly/468B8wq Case opener
    bit.ly/468Bfbk Rodico
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    bit.ly/3X21iwL Horotec tools
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    bit.ly/3CkZt4f Ultrasonic cleaner
    bit.ly/3qAAPtX Ultrasonic cleaning solution
    bit.ly/43V9HEr Denture cleaning tablet
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Komentáře • 335

  • @alekssorokoletov
    @alekssorokoletov Před 3 lety +49

    The "Победа" watch in this design was launched in 1973, not in 50's. Even in the conditions of a total shortage of goods in the USSR, it was a watch for old people and peasants, the poorest inhabitants of the "communist paradise".
    These watch cost 27 rubles, which was about a quarter of the monthly salary of a skilled worker, or almost the entire monthly salary of a collective farmer.
    By the way, the first toilet paper in the USSR began to be produced in 1969, and it remained in short supply until the very collapse of the country :)

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +11

      Hello Alex, thanks for watching and thanks so much for your insights! I've pinned this comment to make sure other viewers also see it. Great stuff!

    • @Killsnapz
      @Killsnapz Před 3 lety +1

      @@VintageWatchServices actually Stalin did speak English quite well.

    • @paulerhard1252
      @paulerhard1252 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Killsnapz BS!!! He did not speak a word of English!

    • @jllewislewis5210
      @jllewislewis5210 Před 3 lety

      What is collapsed its your country not Russia.

    • @alekssorokoletov
      @alekssorokoletov Před 3 lety

      @@jllewislewis5210 Не мучайте себя, пишите на "русском" 😀

  • @JochenVogel
    @JochenVogel Před rokem +4

    I think this is a Pobeda from the 1980s or even the 90s. The finish of their movements deteriorated rapidly in their later decades. There are some watches to be found in which this movement was equipped with a shock-protection and sometimes even a date. They were sold under the brand names Raketa and Vostok in the 1960s and 70s. If the cases are ok, they still make for wearable watches today.
    Thanks for showing us not only the expensive Swiss pieces but also some curiosities like this one!

    • @ihorkhrchvnkv33
      @ihorkhrchvnkv33 Před rokem +1

      Позолоченные Mеханические часы «Победа», изготовленные на часовом заводе Масленникова в 1990 году, по случаю празднования 45-й годовщины победы Великой отечественной войны

    • @user-yz7yk3go9p
      @user-yz7yk3go9p Před rokem +1

      Название часов Победа воскресили в конце 80-х, до это они продавались как ЗИМ. Я купил такие часы в 1990 г. в белом корпусе типа танк с циферблатом зеленого цвета имитацией малахита. Цена 36 рублей.

    • @JochenVogel
      @JochenVogel Před rokem

      @@user-yz7yk3go9p Thanks for the info!

    • @user-yz7yk3go9p
      @user-yz7yk3go9p Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/0Dw0o9woEcw/video.html

  • @mickeyx6746
    @mickeyx6746 Před 3 lety +3

    I liked the insight about oiling the exit pallet. I didn’t even know that each of the tines had a name! Thanks!

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks Mickey! Yes, we separate between the entry pallet and the exit pallet, and they are as you might know absolutely fundamental to the watch's health. The main difference between them is the angle at which they are set, but also how deep they are set. Very important that they are perfectly set, but it's also not very common that there are issues with them.

  • @davidaylsworth8964
    @davidaylsworth8964 Před 6 měsíci

    You’re running commentary is just hilarious! Really enjoy watching the videos. Keep up the fun work.

  • @TurkeyJoe
    @TurkeyJoe Před 3 lety +1

    Its 3am, I've serviced dozens of these already, but I stayed for the entertaining banter, great fun :)

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Hi Joe, that's great to hear! Not that you're sleepless, but that you have fun being so! 😁

  • @lukaslindemann1028
    @lukaslindemann1028 Před rokem +5

    I’ve had a couple of russian watches myself, that were drenched pretty similarly, also smelling like old russian tanks do 😂 quite funny to see someone else have the same experience with this. Love it! You‘re the definition of a „Wolf im Schafspelz“ with your delivery of impeccably dry jokes!

  • @ryshek
    @ryshek Před 3 lety +6

    39:04 There is an inscription in Polish on the strip:
    WATERPROOF
    NATURAL LEATHER
    You make interesting movies, I watch them with interest.
    Greetings from Poland and I can't wait for the next ones.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +2

      Hello Ryshek, thanks for watching and for your comment! Yes, I actually know the inscription says that in Polish thanks to Google translate, but thought I could make some fun out of it :)
      More to come, so stay tuned!

  • @garysmith7545
    @garysmith7545 Před 2 lety +2

    Greetings Stian, I had a victory today: I finally got my first movement running (the Elgin 313 pocket watch) to celebrate I watched your oily Russian video. That one was pretty soggy! I used my oils for the first time. At the price Mobius wants, the oil on that watch was possibly more expensive than the watch!

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +2

      Congrats, Gary! 👍 The first of many to come, I'm sure :) And I'm pretty sure all that oil wasn't Moebius, judging from the smell of it...

  • @jatco84
    @jatco84 Před 2 lety +2

    That is a pretty interesting watch.. and loved your restoration of it.. Got a chuckle out of your comment of 'Swiss Playdough' referring to Rodico. An interesting piece and interesting history of it. As always, your vids and work are most enjoyable to view. Thank you.

  • @robertsharpe3890
    @robertsharpe3890 Před 2 lety +1

    That said it is a very pretty watch and I salute your skills in servicing it. I wish I had a fraction of your ability.

    • @anteneupitra
      @anteneupitra Před 11 měsíci +1

      And works very good for the age it has..,

  • @neilpiper9889
    @neilpiper9889 Před 3 lety +4

    Do more Soviet watches please.
    I love them.
    I have a Raketa day date with the 2628h handwind movement and a Raketa sandwich dial with the 2609ha movement. Both run really well.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Hello Neil, thanks for watching and for your comment! I might indeed do some more Soviet watches, but I don't get my hands on all that many. I'll probably try to do a chronograph at some point.

    • @douro20
      @douro20 Před 2 lety

      Raketa watches are still in production. The company even supplies jewels and springs to some Swiss companies. I would consider their automatic movement among the best made today in terms of robustness and reliability.

    • @a1nelson
      @a1nelson Před rokem

      @@VintageWatchServices Well, if you do, I’d love to see you review them as you do your work, as usual. Soviet watches were the second type of watch that I set about restoring (after a couple Elgin A-11a). I now have Omegas from ever decade (I think), a few Universal Genève automatics, the obligatory Rolex and other fun misc. - all restorations - and they’re great. However, I find myself regularly reaching for my vintage Soviet watches. Maybe they somehow fit my own pragmatism. (Though, my interest in actually _displaying_ those pieces has diminished since 2/2022 :(. )
      They’re not the most technically complex, but my favorites are actually the 24hr/polar models. It was only recently that I learned the practical reasoning behind them - interesting stuff.
      Anyway, thanks for sharing your time with us!

    • @anteneupitra
      @anteneupitra Před 11 měsíci

      In UK, some years ago, raketa were the msot bought watches..

  • @justpassnthru
    @justpassnthru Před 2 lety +1

    You have a very soothing voice to listen to... you're kind of the Bob Ross of watch repair! 😉

  • @zs1dfr
    @zs1dfr Před rokem

    Look on the bright side, Stian - This watch has NO rust! Thank you for the video and the amusing commentary...

  • @RyeOnHam
    @RyeOnHam Před 2 lety +2

    When I was a gunsmith in Alaska, I would often service Native (Eskimo) firearms. It was their habit to use whale and seal oil on the guns. They all smelled like rancid, rotten fat and blood and were often locked up by caramelized animal fat.

  • @walther9161
    @walther9161 Před 2 lety

    The video title was prophetic… Russia… Oil…
    love the cut-to’s during the video!! Can’t wait to see more.

  • @Lemminjoose
    @Lemminjoose Před 2 lety

    I recently won a POBEDA on eBay! Circa 1960s according to the listing. It's still in transit, but the dial looks so gorgeous and I can't wait to give it some love.

  • @timstoffel4799
    @timstoffel4799 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the very instructive video on a basic watch. Lots of useful stuff to learn here!

  • @olejan1438
    @olejan1438 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi,
    Thank You for sharing this useful video and for your kind words about our country!
    Cheers from Russia!)

  • @62smarty
    @62smarty Před rokem

    Great work!

  • @westend3019
    @westend3019 Před 3 lety +2

    "man-eating bear", lol. Thanks for the video and the commentary!

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for watching and for your comment! I might be mistaken about the exact translation but I feel confident I got the gist of it 😉

  • @toboldygo5823
    @toboldygo5823 Před 2 lety +3

    The American ethos was every three years you redesign a car. The Germans Felt that their cars should evolve in small increments more like nature does.The Chinese & Russians felt that you make some thing as perfect as you can then you pump them out. 🤔 🤷🏻‍♂️✨👍🏻

  • @1959Berre
    @1959Berre Před 2 lety +1

    During my military service in the Belgian army in 1981-82, I discovered Lip watches. I had never heard about that brand. Being an officer, I was responsible for the weekly inventory of all weapons. Lip was the designated military watch, which nobody wore, since we all wore our 'civilian' watch.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +3

      When I was in the Army we came up with a fake slogan for them to reflect on that the equipment was old and worn: "If it was good enough for your father, it's good enough for you".

  • @ericahrendt489
    @ericahrendt489 Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you for another excellent video. I thought you were going to explain why my Vostoks won't run even when new. And no props for this watch being completely devoid of plastic? So you're saying the Russians knew something Seiko didn't haha. Please keep them coming.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +3

      Sorry for missing the problem with your Vostoks 😂 I was actually quite impressed that this watch ran at all and in particular that it wasn't all that much off, considering the oil dam it had to drag the wheels through...

  • @marisafulk5652
    @marisafulk5652 Před 2 lety +6

    Be careful...... With that much oil the US may invade your watches....
    On a more serious side note, love your videos. Keep it up!

  • @martinlouden9005
    @martinlouden9005 Před 3 lety

    Another great video. Informative and humorous. Perfect for experienced or new to the game watch repairers!

  • @KathrynLiz1
    @KathrynLiz1 Před 2 lety +2

    Before WW2 a wrist watch was seen as a sign of great affluence in the USSR, so their producing this one was an appropriate thing to do.
    There was enough oil for about 100 watches in that one. but at least it wasn't rusty! 😀

    • @anteneupitra
      @anteneupitra Před 11 měsíci

      Acted as a a conservant.But the russians tell is good ist not easy to see a rusty one..not the same with the swiss

  • @randyallen2771
    @randyallen2771 Před 3 lety +1

    Dobra don Comrade! Interesting show, I'd never heard of these before, however I have several Vostoks, but none are gold ;-) I was surprised that the thing would even run with all that oil! At least there was no rust to contend with. Can't wait to see your next video.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Thanks, Randy! It was indeed very impressive that the watch ran so well (once it actually did) with that sea of oil on the inside. Very simple and reliable movement although slightly lower finishing level than what we are used to... 😄

    • @jllewislewis5210
      @jllewislewis5210 Před 3 lety

      In russia, we dont oil watches watches oil us.

  • @garyboyle695
    @garyboyle695 Před 3 lety

    New video, good start to the day.

  • @991lung
    @991lung Před 3 lety +3

    Oh god, I have never seen this amount of oil in any watch. In some chinese movements it’s already quite bad, because they throw them in whole into a fluid that should lubricate it, but this one is another level. I wonder how this happened. Great work as always :)

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +3

      Another commenter said it's because there were "watch repairers" offering a cheap repair that basically amounted to dipping the movement in oil and wiping off most of it on the dial side....

    • @gang208
      @gang208 Před 2 lety

      @@VintageWatchServices And definitely, the oil is not of the Moebius variety.

    • @whatsstefon
      @whatsstefon Před 2 lety

      @@gang208 it’s definitely the rust prevention variety lol

  • @gaming-historyn-stuff9463

    I got one of thease i think its a 1980s one with the same case desine and applied indices gold plate like the one here. differnt hand set. a very nice watch the zim 2602 is a supringly reliable and accurate moevement. i have a few 2602 movement watches.

  • @yru435
    @yru435 Před rokem

    Thanks for the James Bond allusion. I have a number of these watches, in the same case style, and now I am curious to open them up to see what is in there.

  • @gregcapella5941
    @gregcapella5941 Před 2 lety

    Great Video

  • @tonyking9235
    @tonyking9235 Před rokem +2

    AND I THORT MY CAR USED OIL . MARVELLOUS THAT OIL THAY USED .

  • @frankschroth4038
    @frankschroth4038 Před 2 lety

    Das sah aus wie Olivenöl, leicht grün!!
    Vielleicht ist die Uhr beim essen in den Salat gefallen? Lol
    Great Video!!

  • @francispalmer9737
    @francispalmer9737 Před 3 lety +1

    I recon this watch owner must have dropped this watch in the chip fryer as he was making his dinner. Cheers

  • @VWatchie
    @VWatchie Před 3 lety

    Great video! Thanks! According to the document “The Practical Lubrication of Watches and Clocks” by the British Horological Institute: “Where the oiling of watches is concerned, nothing short of perfection should be accepted.” I guess the watchmaker before you forgot to read that document.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching! Maybe the Russian translation was somewhat flawed 😏 Are you a Vostok watch fan?

    • @VWatchie
      @VWatchie Před 3 lety

      @@VintageWatchServices Yes, the translations was more than likely flawed! 🤣 I am indeed a Vostok watch fan, but these days I'm equally interested in all sorts of calibres. However, Vostok is where I got started as they are extremely affordable and spare parts always available for next to nothing compared to the Swiss. For anyone just starting servicing and repairing watches, I do recommend the Vostok 24XX calibres. For anyone interested, you can see my service walkthrough of a Vostok 2409 here: www.watchrepairtalk.com/topic/11911-vostok-2409-service-walkthrough/ BTW, I'm Swedish, but I'm not sure you, being a Norwegian, would consider that to be merit! 🤣 Hope you'll appreciate the following:
      Det var en gång en svensk, en rysk och en norrman som skulle byta hjärnor.
      Ryssen sa:
      - Jag vill ha en norsk hjärna!
      Då sa svensken:
      - Varför det?
      Ryssen:
      - För att den är helt oanvänd!

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 2 lety

    Stalin didn't speak English...but he did speak Georgian (he was born in Georgia). BTW the case is brass (sometimes blackened brass as is the case with my late production one) and the case back is aluminium.

  • @ihorkhrchvnkv33
    @ihorkhrchvnkv33 Před rokem

    1990! Позолоченные Mеханические часы «Победа», изготовлены на часовом заводе Масленникова в 1990 году, по случаю празднования 45-й годовщины победы Великой отечественной войны...

  • @fubarmodelyard1392
    @fubarmodelyard1392 Před 3 lety

    A little ornate but not too bad when worn. I have several Soviet watches. A Slava that runs well, a Raketa that has a slow motion balance yet runs fast, a Vostok that runs but the big hands don't move on their own, a Pobeda that keeps time, and a Poljot that's the most accurate

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      It actually looks quite alright, not really my style but for what it is it's good. These old Sovietskis actually are of very good quality when measured per dollar they cost.

  • @alaindrolet_atlt_2019
    @alaindrolet_atlt_2019 Před 2 lety

    Nice watch and cool restauration ! You really unoil-it !! 🤪 love it !!

  • @robertsharpe3890
    @robertsharpe3890 Před 2 lety

    Once again a watch is found to have a lake of oil between the movement and the dial. Yet whilst the movement gets cleaned with toilet paper, there is no mention of cleaning the back of the dial. Please tell me it was cleaned before it was put in the dial case?

  • @lobo-1197
    @lobo-1197 Před rokem

    … but you will not find any corrosion in such watch. 😉
    I like your type of humor.

  • @DaveMGmovies
    @DaveMGmovies Před 3 lety

    "My colleague is still working on that Casio." Genius ;-)

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      No shade on Casio, their $20 watches still run much more accurately than a $20000 mechanical watch 😉

    • @DaveMGmovies
      @DaveMGmovies Před 3 lety

      @@VintageWatchServices Fair comment - technology usually wins. Not always with such grace and charm though. Your work allows another generation to enjoy the elegance of clockwork.

  • @rkegs
    @rkegs Před 2 lety

    all of that oil might have preserved it, great job as usual

  • @mehedihassan8944
    @mehedihassan8944 Před rokem

    "we mek the pyertss and its fyinyished"😂😂😂😂
    though i have a 2602 movement and its nicely finished apparently also the case back has some perlage on it😅.

  • @troynasello2085
    @troynasello2085 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic video! I just love your sense of humor. One question; is fixodrop the same thing as one dip? Thanks!

    • @richardsalinetrojr1957
      @richardsalinetrojr1957 Před 3 lety

      One Dip is a cleaner usually used on the balance spring for what I have learned.I've actually seen one person on youtube use one dip to clean the balance cap jewels as well but not sure if thats a good thing to do or not.fixadrop is something that'll actually help keep oil in the place you put it and help it to not spread out to other parts you don't want the oil on.the fixadrop is extremely expensive also costing $180 for a 100ml bottle.well that's the cheapest I've found it so far.I literally just asked if he knows if it comes in anything smaller than 100ml bottles because I think $180 isn't justifiable for someone like myself that'll only be doing maybe 5 watches per year.another name for fixadrop is epilame from the research I've done so far about it.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Hi Troy, no, one dip is a degreasing solution, while fixodrop is a stearic acid. Fixodrop is used to keep oil from creeping, while one dip is used for cleaning parts. Personally I don't use one dip much.

  • @ianconcilio
    @ianconcilio Před 3 lety

    I think the watch started working because the oil had formed a pressurized seal that slowed the balance wheel - when you released it, the movement worked...just a thought...

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Hi Ian, thanks for watching and for your comment! The watch started running after I took the strap off, so I suspect the balance wheel got enough of a jolt to start oscillating. Quite impressive actually, considering the volume of oil it had to drag the wheel train through to make the watch run...

  • @TheSupertecnology
    @TheSupertecnology Před 3 lety +1

    OMG HAHAHAHAHA 10:10
    You definitely got me cracking 😂😂 had to comment on that one too

  • @stevstro4498
    @stevstro4498 Před rokem

    What with the current cost of energy, possibly the previous owner was saving it to take advantage of oil price peaks 😉

  • @bojidarvasilev8854
    @bojidarvasilev8854 Před 3 lety +1

    it is definitely no longer a Russian watch. Good job 👍👍

  • @panaglaw
    @panaglaw Před 2 lety

    Hi Stien, top job as always a pleasure to watch and enjoy the commentary.
    How come you didn't just lume the hands?

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! The dial didn't have any lume, this the hands shouldn't either 😉

  • @michaelbedford8017
    @michaelbedford8017 Před rokem

    Interesting that there was far less 'crud' on the case and movement.
    Mind you, back then you had to queue even for crud.

  • @HansMeijner
    @HansMeijner Před 3 lety

    I serviced a Luch with a 2209 movement a few weeks ago. Or at least I tried. Someone before me had ruined the hairspring and the stud holder. So I got to find a donor movement. Really thin movement for the time it was first produced.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Hans, thanks for watching and for your comment! The Luch 2209 is a very nice looking watch and quite un-Soviet-ish both for the dial and case and the movement. It's always a bummer when someone has messed the watch up like that but luckily you should be able to find a donor movement at a reasonable cost :)

  • @roopakvaidya1450
    @roopakvaidya1450 Před 2 lety

    Someone may have soaked the movement in oil to preserve it until such time as it could be properly serviced.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      From a Russian commenter I heard that it was pretty common to have a "watch repairer" simply dunk the movement in oil and charge a couple of rubles for it.. certainly keeps the rust away!

  • @OffGridInvestor
    @OffGridInvestor Před 3 lety

    FYI there's a FEW gold plated russian ones, not many though. And they tend to be TEN carat... instead of the 9ct we're used to in the west. But on the inside of the back cover they'll often say the micron thickness of the gold.

  • @magintysmaw
    @magintysmaw Před 3 lety

    First class. Thank you

  • @johnutting9615
    @johnutting9615 Před 2 lety +1

    Well it was never going to get rusty !!

  • @TheD777777
    @TheD777777 Před 3 lety +1

    well, at least it was not rusty :)

  • @itzhaccroitoru4082
    @itzhaccroitoru4082 Před 3 lety

    Nice job and clearly explained,I have a watch for blind people,I don't know how to set the time ?

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Hello Itzhac, thanks for watching and for your comment! What kind of watch do you have then? Most Braille watches I have seen are only different in the dial and hands, having an open dial for blind people to touch.

  • @OffGridInvestor
    @OffGridInvestor Před 3 lety

    I'm into the russian stuff quite a bit. Particularly the commemorative watches, Olympics, WW2, and I love some of the dial colours. Absolutely brilliant with the colours. Got a bunch coming from numerous sources mainly in Ukraine.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Very cool. They cater to a different design preference but the watches are maybe the best value for money you can get.

  • @OffGridInvestor
    @OffGridInvestor Před 3 lety

    I noticed as I look at russian ones to buy, it's VERY common to either have no seconds hand or the little one on it's own above the 6.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      I honestly wouldn't know, but would think it follows the trajectory of western watches in that swee seconds hands became the most common ones in the 1950's, perhaps a decade later in the USSR, while you will always also have a market for watches with small seconds.

  • @Lunalysis
    @Lunalysis Před 3 lety +4

    Do Russian watches come with a dipstick?

  • @boydsargeant7496
    @boydsargeant7496 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks. I’ve worked on a couple of these movements before! If you don’t mind me saying, it would be useful if you said what adjustments you make to the watch to get it just so on the timer graph. Also what are in your opinion the ideal settings on the timer graph, as I’m thinking of buying one.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Boyd, it varies a bit with each video whether I show more detail on the timing and adjustment, maybe the best one is the one on the Zenith Surf. Have a look at it and let me know if that helps!

  • @christopherjames9214
    @christopherjames9214 Před rokem

    Qualifies you for membership of OPEC I would think!

  • @aib0160
    @aib0160 Před 2 lety

    The dial looks more like a clock than a watch. At least there was never going to be any rust inside the movement. This was a bit like a service on a car which is mostly about changing the oil.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching and for your comment! The style of this dial is quite typical Russian and it does indeed look like a clock dial. Tastes are just different around the world, I suppose :)
      And there wasn't much chance of rust in this one for sure 😂

  • @5naxalotl
    @5naxalotl Před 2 lety

    first video i saw someone use epilam. i don't get why more people don't, since it's so useful keeping oil where it's supposed to be

  • @Valery9128
    @Valery9128 Před rokem

    You know, the watch movement was conserved. Otherwise, you would not be able to get it in good shape. In your case, you just needed to clean it of oil and it work. By the way, I live in Samara, the city where this watch was made)))

  • @valerystpnv1180
    @valerystpnv1180 Před rokem

    Good pronunciation:)

  • @jacobgreenmanedlion1863

    Actually, early production pobedas were beautifully finished and decorated.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Hello Jacob, thanks for sharing that! I don't know the Pobeda's too much, but the ones I've seen have that distinctive Russian/Soviet style. Were the movements also nicely finished? I've seen a couple that were let's say Seiko level.

    • @jacobgreenmanedlion1863
      @jacobgreenmanedlion1863 Před 3 lety

      @@VintageWatchServices I have a Pobeda from 1952 manufactured in the First Moscow Watch Factory. It uses the same LIP derived caliber. It has a bi-metallic balance, a breguet overcoil, and very impressive finish and decoration. The movement has Geneva-type striping very finely applied on the main surfaces of the plates with fine pearlage applied elsewhere, on both the front and dial-side of the movement.. The sides of the plates have rounded, highly polished edges. Under a 10x I could find no flaws in the finishing. It is a Soviet-market watch with a sub-seconds, and not a gold one or something like that. I would guess the finish on the movement would not quite rate a Geneva seal, but would rate comparison with movements that do without embarrassment (it does so against what I could see-I’m not enough of a watchmaker to risk disassembly of them- on my 1940s Patek tank and my 1956 Vacheron 6115).
      I have a variety of Soviet watches- when I was younger and poorer they were the main focus of my watch collecting (and really remain so)- using the Pobeda’s movement in both sub-second and center-second form- even hacking. Some are finished fairly well- comfortably exceeding Seiko and even contemporary low-mid Swiss brands such as Tissot (as opposed to something using, say, the EB8800). Some could be best described as “not finished” in the sense of almost “not completed”. The 1MWF I described above is by far the best. 1MWF (Poljot) and the Factory eventually known as Raketa produced the best; finish generally declined as time went on, and the superior factories designed superior movements. The case design, bescheißen finish, face style, and the presence of shock resistance on that watch make me think it was probably made in the ZIM factory, and way later then your guess of the 1950s- i’d think more like mid-70s. ZIM produced LIP K26-type movements past the fall of the Soviet and Into the 21st century under the Pobeda brand.
      The end of their production was one of the few positive things that came out of the collapse of the Russian watch industry in the mid 2000s that left only Vostok and a reincarnation of raketa standing, but cost us several interesting companies like Poljot, Moljnia, Chaika, and Slava. I miss their double-barrel autos in particular.

  • @jurivlk5433
    @jurivlk5433 Před 2 lety

    This kind of dial is called "cartouches" and used f.ex. on Neuchâtel Pendulum clocks.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      Yep, a lot of the Soviet style watches have some variation of cartouche dials, but they are quite distinctively Soviet still, imo.

  • @ttjoseph1
    @ttjoseph1 Před 2 lety

    I have a Pobeda ZIM2602 that must have passed through the hands of the same watchmaker…absolutely drowning in that greenish oil. I’m guessing this was shipped to you from Poland

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +1

      I believe it actually was! Maybe they went to the same watchmaking school 😂

  • @alanmckinnon6791
    @alanmckinnon6791 Před 3 lety +1

    It was made from '45 to the 80's and maybe even 2000? So it's the VW Beetle of watches then!
    I can see why it lasted so long - nothing in it can break! Gotta love the Soviets

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks so much for your comment, Alan! It's indeed very comparable to the Beetle, which was commissioned by Hitler to be a cheap, reliable car for everyone. The formal name of the Beetle in German, Volkswagen, literally means "people's car". Great observation!

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 Před 3 lety

      While Pobeda watches themselves petered out by the 80s, ZIM carried on making watches with the same 2602 movement until 2006. Amazing you could buy a new watch with a caliber from 1950 that recently.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the insight, Jake, much appreciated! It is indeed pretty crazy, but it's probably also testament to the fabulous reliability of this movement. Would you know the prices of those recent ZIM watches? I would assume they would rival quartz watches?

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 Před 3 lety +1

      @@VintageWatchServices It is a testament to the quality and simplicity of the 2602, which itself is a modified version of the LIP R-26 from 1908. A Breguet hairspring, perlage, and Geneva striping were the original modifications, but only the Breguet harispring was retained throughout.
      The Soviet Union's consumer goods often get a lot of flack because they're made in the USSR, but the reality is they stacked up well to anything else the rest of the world made. Soviet watches are proof of this, as everything from the everyman Pobeda and ZIM to the luxurious Poljot and Luch were of sound design and of at least decent build quality.
      Post-Soviet ZIM watches are a lot harder to find than their Soviet counterparts, but when you do find one, expect to pay no more than $30 for a working one. Broken ones would obviously be less.

  • @samnova450
    @samnova450 Před 4 měsíci

    Wow that a bunch of oil. 🛢️🛢️. Interesting history..

  • @rashidamin7241
    @rashidamin7241 Před 3 lety

    Thank you sir 💖💖 amazing

  • @eduardoperez7797
    @eduardoperez7797 Před rokem

    He said we struck oil 😂 lol good one that was like $60 bucks of Moebius

  • @amandagelien9612
    @amandagelien9612 Před 9 měsíci +1

    AT least ,it is not rusty !!!!!!!

  • @gast9374
    @gast9374 Před 2 lety

    Next a Ruhla-Watch, please! 😎

  • @gromit1996
    @gromit1996 Před 3 lety

    I have a Vostok version of this with a Zoom 2602. I am having a huge problem reassembling the train bridge and can't get the pivots in their jewel settings for the life of me. Some day I will get it correct, but you make it look so easy. Such amazing work and skill.
    What is the crystal size/diameter that you replaced this with? Thanks.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Hello Clay, thanks for watching and for your comment! It's just a matter of experience and patience getting the pivots in place :) Make sure the pivots are properly in the holes in the mainplate before you try putting the bridges on. Then get the pivots into the bridge starting from the center wheel and moving towards the escape wheel. Once a few of the wheels are in place you can move the barrel a little bit back and forth, that might make the rest of the pivots fall in place.
      I unfortunately don't remember which crystal size this was 😄

  • @itzhaccroitoru4082
    @itzhaccroitoru4082 Před 3 lety

    It is a Tavannese Watch Co-Swiss-U.S.Patent. 24 May 1904 #13503037,It woreks well.Iwill clean it up.
    Why i'm new in this hobby,I'm still scared to such a watch.Thanks for the immediate answer.

  • @peterhawley6273
    @peterhawley6273 Před 3 lety

    Good video 👍

  • @sanskritmantra1113
    @sanskritmantra1113 Před rokem

    do you think the last watchmaker who worked on this watch thought the4 winding stem was an oil dipstick and just filled to the mark??

  • @frohnnielsen
    @frohnnielsen Před rokem

    How is the metallurgy of soviet and Chinese watches? Does that have much impact? Incidentally, that watch reminds me very much of cheap electric wall clocks found in every north american home in the late 50s.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před rokem

      Soviet watches were made of low quality metals, Chinese watches seem to use good quality depending on the price levels.

    • @frohnnielsen
      @frohnnielsen Před rokem

      @@VintageWatchServices thank you very much for that. If they start with poor quality materials, does that not imply that soviet watches are trying to make a silk purse from a sow's ear? As an 'old car guy', i know that soviet cars will never be very good simply because they start with poor materials. No matter how much you fix them, they will never be more than mediocre. Very much enjoying your channel. I have taken watches apart, but not quite managed to reassemble them…… :)

  • @jurivlk5433
    @jurivlk5433 Před 2 lety

    Generally, Russian or soviet watches lacked oil and stopped prematurely. Like Omega did in the early 2000s.

  • @richardsalinetrojr1957
    @richardsalinetrojr1957 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome video as always.always love learning more about servicing watch movements.any chance you know if you can get the fixadrop in anything smaller than a 100ml bottle?for a person still getting started in this hobby and being as I more than likely won't be doing more then maybe 5 watches per year I serious can't justify spending $180 on a 100ml bottle of the stuff.besides that if the fixadrop does actually have a expiration date im sure it'll go bad before I use even 5% of it.also after looking at the oiling sheet for a sellita sw200 I see that it says to use the fixadrop on all the keyless works parts as well.is that absolutely necessary and is that something you would recommend doing or is it safe to just go about putting a little grease on the areas needed and be done with it?

    • @VWatchie
      @VWatchie Před 3 lety

      You can get Fixodrop in smaller quantities on eBay. Still silly expensive though. Do we really need it? Well, it facilitates not spreading the oil, but is it really necessary? I guess not.

    • @richardsalinetrojr1957
      @richardsalinetrojr1957 Před 3 lety

      @@VWatchie awesome.ill check out eBay then.thank you.didnt really think it was 100% necessary to use on the keyless works being that thicker grease is used on those parts but would still like to do the pallet jewels with it prior to oiling.before I buy anything else though I'm gonna ask my local watchmaker and see if he'd be willing to trade me a little bit for a fresh bottle of 9010 since I somehow ended up buying 2 bottles of it.1 place said it was out of stock when I placed order so ordered it from another place and ended up receiving them both 3 days apart.lol.thank you for the info.greatly appreciated.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      👍

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid Před 3 lety

    Thing to remember, the Soviet citizen's life was hugely regulated by the party, it became a bone of contention that anything Soviet made was the best even when it was broken or poorly made because criticising Soviet made goods could get you an invite to one of Russia's more select establishments for a serious word about western capitalist saboteurs.
    Watches were not exempt from this, you could buy only what your "station" afforded you to buy and it had to last you a lifetime and they were watching too, if suddenly you got yourself a brand new gold Raketa or Chaika Stadium whilst working down the ball bearing factory, a couple of low brimmed hat wearing gents would pay you a visit to explain your new found exuberance and of course that invitation to a select establishment in the wilds of Siberia for a jolly holiday with full bed and board, the very best gruel and lots of interesting times with the tall men with keys.
    Pobeda, because of its link to Stalin had to be better than the rest otherwise those dark chaps in long overcoats would turn up unexpected for a chat with the managers etc and the offer of free holidays in Siberia if they didn't up their game. Owning a foreign watch too was a big no no, OK the top elite all wore super capitalist western watches but they had to under duress, to show the brave patriots what not to wear and own, it was a burden the top elite bore well, after all they had to search out the capitalist pitfalls the average citizen wasn't wise enough to spot and so they soldiered on with their tailored Italian suits, swiss watches, handmade Italian shoes and no doubt they hated every minute of it... :P

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety

      Indeed, everyone was equal, some were just a bit more equal than others :) I remember visiting East Berlin in the 1980's and it was quite bizarre. Probably quite similar to the USSR, I'd imagine.
      Thanks for your insights!

  • @darcybrawataakaontariostac6835

    I guess thats where the oil went from the Exxon Oil spill went

  • @tommyvictorbuch6960
    @tommyvictorbuch6960 Před rokem

    This reminds me of W. C. Fields, who hated his nephew, since he dropped his pocked watch in syrup.

  • @rachelm9990
    @rachelm9990 Před 3 lety +2

    I love Soviet engineering, never has anyone been able to somehow both over AND under engineer something at the same time like a Soviet. Beautiful work once you got the thing degreased!

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Hello Rachel, very true indeed. It's probably a better way of saying what I was trying to convey :)

  • @johnutting9615
    @johnutting9615 Před 2 lety

    When the balance wheel is installed does the balance wheel pin go outside of the palet fork or inside thefork ?

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      Hello John, you place the balance so that the pallet fork is ready to receive the impulse pin into its horns. Then when you rotate it, the impulse pin will connect properly with the fork. This doesn't always go right, so in some cases I'll gently help the impulse pin over the fork on the other side with the tweezers.

  • @SideWalkAstronomyNetherlands

    Was that a Sardine I saw swimming in that barrol?

  • @Gary-Seven-and-Isis-in-1968

    Hello,
    I have a watch with this movement and the crown has worn perfectly smooth and needs to be replaced.
    Can you tell me what the thread size is so I can order one to replace it upon the original stem.
    Many thanks for this upload, it might be helpful when I service my example.

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      Hello Gary, I believe the stem has a 1.0mm thread, but if you are planning to replace the crown you might have something to measure the stem with also?

  • @LCMNUNES1962
    @LCMNUNES1962 Před 3 lety

    VERY GOOD JOB from Brasil ok

  • @tesseract2365
    @tesseract2365 Před 2 lety

    I see you clean the pivots with a pin vice and something in the end, is it pith wood? Lol you literally answered this question right after I typed it

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +1

      😂

    • @davidlondon5241
      @davidlondon5241 Před 2 lety +1

      Interesting watch oiled by dip method , great narrative thanks. Also I missed what the item you used to clean the pivots thank you

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety +1

      Hello David, it is a product called Eveflex. They come in several grits and I typically use the very fine one.

  • @colonialclive
    @colonialclive Před 3 lety +1

    There’s more oil in that watch than I cook my bacon in!

  • @user-w00d
    @user-w00d Před 3 lety +1

    2 Московский часовой завод, потом Слава. А нет, это ЗиМ, завод имени Масленникова, г. Самара. 11707 это не калибр!!! 2602 калибр

  • @lynnjasen9727
    @lynnjasen9727 Před 2 lety

    Oil does mean there seems to be no corrosion. And so much oil seems to mean no gunk, just oil. Am I wrong?

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 2 lety

      Hello Lynn, that's more or less correct, but watches do "breathe" a bit, so tiny particles of dust and dirt do enter the case. And when they mix with the oil, you get the scientific term "gunk" 😁

  • @mickeyx6746
    @mickeyx6746 Před 3 lety +4

    Hahahahahaha!!! The reference to the insane Covid-hoarding of toilette paper was excellent! Mindlessness and hysteria, hallmarks of humanity, rather sadly so....

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Indeed, we are after all only dumb animals sometimes capable of intelligent thought... 😁

  • @amandagelien9612
    @amandagelien9612 Před 9 měsíci

    looks like a Timex with jewels🤣

  • @franka9760
    @franka9760 Před 3 lety

    The guy on Chronoglide is all about himself. Plus his English is pretty weak. So please keep posting your work as often as you can. It is very much appreciated!

    • @VintageWatchServices
      @VintageWatchServices  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Frank, no worries, I will keep posting until I die at the bench 😉

  • @paulsteele6120
    @paulsteele6120 Před 3 lety

    In the shipping industry oil filled gauges especially those subjected to high amplitude vibration are common. However, some years ago I remember it was quite the fad to have oil filled watches these must have escapements effected by the damping effect of the oil. How where they compensated to run true?