Glycine Airman
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Glycine Airman
just got this in the mail, and a big thanks to Mike for guiding me, the hacking even works.
quick and dirty cell phone pic
quick and dirty cell phone pic
Re: Glycine Airman
is this the same one Mike had or another of the same model you found???Damn cool!!
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Re: Glycine Airman
ericf4 wrote:is this the same one Mike had or another of the same model you found???Damn cool!!
another of the same model, the guy that owned it flew 67 missions out of Thailand (Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base) flying Douglas EB-66E, a radar jamming plane accompanying F-105s and B52's to jam enemy radar.
Re: Glycine Airman
thats FRICKIN cool man
Re: Glycine Airman
Congrats on your Airman The difference between the two caesarmascetti has a A.Schild 1701 25 jewel Movement. Mine is the Glycine Special version has the same movement but lower jewel count think a 17 jewel movement so they can sell it at a lower cost in the PX I read on line. Dam that was fast shipping. Since it has a none quick set date you do that 24 back to the 20 and back to the 24 save ware and tear on the movement by not going full circle turning the hands for the date change. And you got some cool history with that watch.ericf4 wrote:is this the same one Mike had or another of the same model you found???Damn cool!!
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Re: Glycine Airman
Thanks man it's running slow, so I packed it up in a box and am sending it to Nevada Watch, my pictures suck but it really is in very nice shapeRiver Rat wrote:Congrats on your Airman The difference between the two caesarmascetti has a A.Schild 1701 25 jewel Movement. Mine is the Glycine Special version has the same movement but lower jewel count think a 17 jewel movement so they can sell it at a lower cost in the PX I read on line. Dam that was fast shipping. Since it has a none quick set date you do that 24 back to the 20 and back to the 24 save ware and tear on the movement by not going full circle turning the hands for the date change. And you got some cool history with that watch.ericf4 wrote:is this the same one Mike had or another of the same model you found???Damn cool!!
Re: Glycine Airman
Surprising since I got it back from service I been wearing mine ever since. And it's not the most expensive watch in the collection just way different than the others.
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Re: Glycine Airman
River Rat wrote:Surprising since I got it back from service I been wearing mine ever since. And it's not the most expensive watch in the collection just way different than the others.
they had no idea the last time it had been serviced, and judging from what the spring bars looked like the leather strap was original just like the seller said, there was all kinds of gunk on them
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- toxicavenger
- President Tranny
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Re: Glycine Airman
Still lurkin'! Nice pickup
Re: Glycine Airman
I remember some members had fears the size of this watch being small. I did a post at MWR for members to post there Airman. Well one member spotted photo's of a vintage Gylcine Airman in a men's clothing magazine some good wrist shots dam cool leather NATO those shots make the watch look normal and not small at all the perfect size. And looks like these vintage pieces is getting rediscovered to show up in a magazine .
http://www.mwrforum.net/forums/showthre ... an-watches
http://www.mwrforum.net/forums/showthre ... an-watches
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Re: Glycine Airman
not a bad size at all, I have about a 7.25" wrist and it wears nicely IMO the lugs are relatively long so the watch wears bigger than the diameter would indicate IMO
Re: Glycine Airman
Your watch is in good hands here is another happy customer has before and after photo's Jim does great work.
http://forums.watchuseek.com/f18/vintag ... 59626.html
http://forums.watchuseek.com/f18/vintag ... 59626.html
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Re: Glycine Airman
I have no doubt about that already heard back from Jim:River Rat wrote:Your watch is in good hands here is another happy customer has before and after photo's Jim does great work.
http://forums.watchuseek.com/f18/vintag ... 59626.html
Thank you for sending the watch. I have opened the case; it looks almost new. It is always useful to put watches on the electronic timing machine as they are received. As you wrote, the watch is running slow. What I am seeing is a loss of 40 seconds a day in the dial up or dial down position. In the crown down position, it is slow about 55 seconds a day. As you may be aware, watch timing is dependent on the position of the watch. There is the effect of gravity as the positions change, and also there are frictional losses that vary with position.
The 15 second positional difference is not unusual, although I believe that I can mitigate it a bit. Of course, I will bring the overall timing up to as close to zero as possible. Customarily, with the positional differences, I divide the error on either site of zero. So the watch may be a bit fast in one position, and a bit slow in another position, with the hope that when worn, the errors will more or less cancel.
One thing not correct with the watch on the timing machine is the balance wheel amplitude. With a watch freshly cleaned and oiled, one expects the balance wheel to swing about 270 degrees ether side of the center in the dial position, although many old watches, due to wear don’t always live up to the expectation. With your watch, which may not have been cleaned and oiled in quite some time (?), the balance is swinging well over 300 degrees. This definitely not correct.
A possibility is that an incorrect mainspring may have been installed at some point over the fifty-odd years since it left the factory. The other, I think more likely possibility, is that there is a lubrication problem with the spring. The mainspring in a watch is contained in the mainspring barrel, which is a flat cylindrical container. In a hand wound watch, the outer end of the mainspring is hooked to the barrel wall. The inner end is attached to the mainspring arbor, which is where the winding takes place.
With an auto winding watch, the outer end of the mainspring is allowed to slip when the watch is fully wound. If not for this slipping the winding mechanism would break the spring. The wall of the mainspring barrel is coated with a specific lubricant to facilitate the slipping. It could be that in the case of your watch, the spring is not slipping as it should and is being wound beyond its design limit. The only way to know is to wait until I have the watch disassembled.
If there is a mainspring problem, not cured by lubrication, then the mainspring will need to be replaced. What I would like to do is to quote you the $240 cost of service and have the contingent possibility of a mainspring replacement at $30. Of course, if the spring is O.K., then the $30 contingency goes away.
so worst case scenario it looks like about $270, for service
Re: Glycine Airman
That thing is incredible! Great find.
pure awesomeness :
(adj) The condition of having no faults, being completely extreme, and incredibly sick at life.
(adj) The condition of having no faults, being completely extreme, and incredibly sick at life.
Re: Glycine Airman
It's been all most a few months wondering if you got it back from service yet ?
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Re: Glycine Airman
Just got it back this past Friday all serviced, wearing it as I type :-)River Rat wrote:It's been all most a few months wondering if you got it back from service yet ?
Re: Glycine Airman
pics?? congrats!
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