1968 Timex Mickey Mouse Vintage Watch Restoration

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2024
  • Join Marshall for another journey into watchmaking, this time he's got his hands on a US Time Mickey Mouse watch from 1968! This was actually a watch he restored before, but the mainspring has broken and it needs a repair! Many people think that these Timex/US Time movements aren't repairable or serviceable, but they actually are. Sort of.
    Come along for the ride, and see if Marshall can get this fun little watch ticking again :)
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Комментарии • 886

  • @judyhobday4760
    @judyhobday4760 2 года назад +14

    I was in fourth grade in 1945 and got a Mickey Mouse watch for Christmas from my grandparents. For some reason I put the watch on my desk and went to lunch. I was young and not smart. So came back watch was gone. Broke my heart. My husband bought me one for my fortieth birthday, and I love it and it still runs.

  • @bgdavenport
    @bgdavenport 2 года назад +99

    My wife gave this to me for our first Christmas together...47 years ago. Still have it and it runs quite well. Probably should have it cleaned.

  • @justinneal9639
    @justinneal9639 2 года назад +25

    It feels like I'm watching ESPN with the great commentary. You definitely make what you do appear fascinating

  • @chuckkellogg2404
    @chuckkellogg2404 Год назад +53

    Being a manufacturing engineer for 30 years i have to wonder how the factory originally assembled the movement.
    I absolutely love your channel, keep up the great vids!

    • @Mars-zgblbl
      @Mars-zgblbl 4 месяца назад

      Was going to comment the same. I suspect the factory had jigs to hold the parts precisely in place. If you can find a jig, you could likely repair these movements economically

  • @wes11bravo
    @wes11bravo 2 года назад +43

    Yeah, I initially said to myself "What's this crackerjack piece of junk?!?" After seeing it work under the microscope, my opinion has done an about face. This is an engineering and design marvel, something incredibly complicated made within tightly constrained parameters that actually *works* acceptably well for what it is. Wow.

  • @snitkofb
    @snitkofb 2 года назад +23

    Thank you for admitting that it took you nearly 120 minutes to get that in. Makes me feel a lot better about spending 45 minutes trying to get a bridge on the other day.

  • @Lupinthe3rd.
    @Lupinthe3rd. 2 года назад +4

    Japanese emperor hirohito was such a big Disney fan that a 1974 $20 Mickey mouse watch was his most prized possession he would wear everywhere from day to day use to state functions. He was even buried with it when he died in 1989.

  • @waltervega8730
    @waltervega8730 6 месяцев назад +2

    The Mickey Mouse watch was my first watch , which my grandma gave, for my birthday. I loved it! I remember just waiting for people to ask me what time it was, so i could tell them the time. My childhood, was in the 70s, s great time to grow up. Timex to me is so Nostalgic, brings back many memories. I wore several Timex watches, i still do.

  • @shadowhenge7118
    @shadowhenge7118 2 года назад +19

    He is a man of focus, commitment, and sheer effing will. Well done.

  • @xtbuff1008
    @xtbuff1008 4 года назад +353

    Your machine can't check this watch because the beat rate is 4 per sceond-14,400 per hour and the machine isn't designed to pick that up. Even my old Watchmaster couldn't until I sent one of the tuning forks away to be changed. I work on the dollar watch movements from Ingersoll, Ingraham, Westclox. Of course they're wonderful: anybody can make an expensive watch, but it takes real engineering genius to make a cheap one that works.

    • @juanito3pasito
      @juanito3pasito 2 года назад +3

      You service them?

    • @xephael3485
      @xephael3485 Год назад +6

      @@juanito3pasito said they work in them so likely services them for some purpose.

    • @MrMultitool
      @MrMultitool Год назад +2

      I have a couple of the Westclocks that need servicing/repairing.

    • @malice6081
      @malice6081 Год назад +1

      I have a westclox, I'd love for it it to be serviced but you can't service them. They are riveted.

    • @nm7sp
      @nm7sp 8 месяцев назад

      According to 17jewels and ranfft websites and my obeservatons/calculations, the Times M24 runs at 18,000 bph 5 bps 2,5 hz. And my mobile based frequency checker does also say it is 18,000.

  • @powerflail7832
    @powerflail7832 3 года назад +207

    I think that this watch perfectly exemplifies what the word “design” actually means.
    The true “Design” is about finding the best solution within a clearly defined set of limitations. In this case the “clearly defined limitation” - is the cost of production, or the price point of the piece. And the solutions which were found - are simply brilliant.
    Quintessential designers at their best!
    After 50 years the damn thing works, losing a minute or two a day! It probably did not do much better when it came of the production line.
    I am sure that the designs of the tooling for such tremendous production volume, were just as ingenious and amazing as the watch itself.
    Thank you very much for your excellent choice of the worthy subject for your video!

    • @flytrapjohn
      @flytrapjohn 3 года назад +3

      Only designers with complete understanding of all the materials and processes involved, can make this sort of mechanism.
      Whatever scale that may be.
      Something that is this simple, has taken much time to design. Although the movement reminds me of a 400 day movement of the era.

    • @JasperJanssen
      @JasperJanssen 3 года назад +7

      Yep. “Overbuilt” is easy. Trivial even. But making *this* , and making it possible to assemble it consistently (presumably not by hand)? *that* is hard.

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor 2 года назад +3

      There were almost none that done better than 30 seconds a day when new.

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor 2 года назад +1

      @@JasperJanssen I bet the factory had some kind of little fingers on a rig to hold the top pivots as they sat the top plate on. Then they would slip the fingers out the side as just before the screws went on from underneath, still sitting in the same position.

    • @UNSCPILOT
      @UNSCPILOT 2 года назад +16

      A 2$ watch that's still *alive* 50 years later, whereas my 200$ samsung had its screen die within a year of purchase.
      So yeah, maybe I'm becoming a fan of oldschool mechanical or at least analog watches XD

  • @Ed-eq8ui
    @Ed-eq8ui 8 месяцев назад +9

    You're very skilled. You disassemble these watches quickly and you know exactly how they go back together. I'd be taking 40 photos for every step to make sure I don’t forget something.

  • @stemikger
    @stemikger 3 года назад +71

    Amazing. He said he was an amateur but his skills are pretty impressive to me. Great work.

    • @bostonrailfan2427
      @bostonrailfan2427 2 года назад +14

      he did what hundreds of repairmen refused to do: he tried to fix it and discovered the secrets…

    • @johntate5050
      @johntate5050 Год назад +5

      Amateur means you just don't get paid. It doesn't mean you're not skilled.

    • @michaeldimmitt2188
      @michaeldimmitt2188 Год назад +2

      @@johntate5050 AMEN!!!

  • @dennisc.1189
    @dennisc.1189 4 года назад +31

    I had a Mickey Mouse watch like that in 1971, I wore it for years. Thanks for sharing this watch, that I have some old memories with.

  • @alfiebm
    @alfiebm 2 года назад +25

    This was the watch that made me start collecting watches. First time I saw this was from my grandmother, she was so proud of this watch because it always saves her financially because she usually pawned it in times of need, but after a few years due to hardships, she could'nt buy it back from the shop. I was still young, and if I had the money, I wish I could have bought it back. I miss my grandma, and this watch will always reminds me of her. Thank you for uploading.

    • @lucyf9034
      @lucyf9034 Год назад +2

      But now do you have one?

  • @rickcroucher
    @rickcroucher 2 года назад +7

    I bought one of those in '75. It never ran and I have kept it in a drawer. I took it to a jeweler who said it could not be worked on. So I put it back in the drawer. A couple of years ago I took the back off and found the "innerds" to be maybe fixable. And then I found your video. Mine is a little different in that there is no cover plate after taking the back off. It opens right to the wheels and such. I've kept it in hopes that one day, if I learn enough, that I might be able to take it apart and possibly put it back together with no extra parts left over and have it run after 45 years in a drawer. I thought my grandson might like it. Thanks for posting.

    • @michaeldimmitt2188
      @michaeldimmitt2188 Год назад

      Can you put some pictures of the innerds of your movement online? I'd like to see them.

  • @AndySharpeta
    @AndySharpeta 3 года назад +22

    Marshell, Quick story! But first, great video!
    I am new to watch collecting, and I have along with that an interest in taking watches apart for repairs and such. When I say I am new, I mean, I just went on ETSY last week and bought a half dozen trinket watches to take apart and play with. I am by no means mechanical minded or a tinker of things. Not knowing what I was getting into, I bought a little Mickey Mouse watch for my daughter, fully functioning, from the 60's. I received it today and started taking it apart. (Did I mention it was already working?) I took the plate of and a little part fell out of place. "I can put this one piece back", I thought, not knowing how everything was attached to...air.. Then as I was looking through the loupe. PING! An atomic explosion happened right in front of my eyeball! My heart sank. I did not take a picture before starting to try and reset this one piece. Well after a couple of hours of trying to figure it out, I went to YTU(RUclips University) and I found you. You are working on a man's watch here, I think. I had a ladies watch!
    After seeing the order you put the train back together in, I at least had a destination. It took me SEVERAL dozen tries to get everything seated. Many micro explosions happening along the way. LOL. Then the plate! The first try was not successful, but I was able to get it on the second "plate attempt". Yeah!!! After hearing and seeing you talk about how difficult this is, I am very encouraged to think that, if I can beat Micky, I have hope to learn how to handle any watch!
    If you read this, Thanks. Great video!

  • @rickhoover6479
    @rickhoover6479 4 года назад +19

    I've done enough of these over the years that I've now stopped doing them. Kudos to you for your persistence. They are frustrating!

  • @Lennartz1
    @Lennartz1 Год назад +2

    So Mickey Mouse saved Timex. Great history lesson!

  • @federicoprice2687
    @federicoprice2687 Год назад +9

    Brilliant video! 👏 My grandmother gave me one of these MM Timexes when I was a kid and I wore it for years - until I saved enough to buy a more upmarket Tissot (which also still works!) As my gran's eyesight failed and she couldn't see her own watch dial properly, I gave the MM Timex and she wore it for years as well. I found it after she died, and it still runs, just! Well, it keeps terrible time, which isn't surprising after 50 or so years, especially without Jewels and no servicing..... Simple, but tough little things. Almost kid proof I suppose! I must dig it out and send it to you 👿 😃

  • @endlesswanderer1753
    @endlesswanderer1753 2 года назад +5

    My mom had this same watch. She replaced the strap with a pink one. That memory was just hidden in the recesses of my mind until just now.

  • @paullambert7840
    @paullambert7840 3 года назад +11

    That watch is in really good shape considering the quality of the build and all. I have to admit, I knew these were never great timepieces, I never realized how, well, Mickey Mouse they really were.

    • @UNSCPILOT
      @UNSCPILOT 2 года назад +7

      And yet, they still outlive a lot more expensive devices today, which is equally sad and funny

  • @djmips
    @djmips 8 месяцев назад +2

    I'm super happy you didn't find it beneath you to work on a Mickey Mouse watch because I used to take apart these movements as a kid and never got them back together so for me this is fascinating and super satisfying.

  • @nagizah8
    @nagizah8 3 года назад +44

    I think its hilarious that the service manual for these movements says to clean it by dumping the whole thing in lighter fluid

    • @trooperbill
      @trooperbill 3 года назад +1

      I've a few in now

    • @MrGomeazy
      @MrGomeazy 3 года назад +6

      I am working on a vintage Timex with the same movement. I considered just throwing the whole thing in lighter fluid but wasn’t sure...now that it is disassembled I will use this video as my reference lol.

    • @nagizah8
      @nagizah8 3 года назад +1

      @@MrGomeazy it's a better idea, kek.

    • @gideonkloosterman
      @gideonkloosterman 2 года назад +1

      @@MrGomeazy May I ask what the name is of your timex? I'm very interested in messing with one of these movements! 😄

  • @CaliforniaEBRDude
    @CaliforniaEBRDude 2 года назад +5

    I just "restored" an official Disney-branded Mickey Mouse watch from about year 2015. It just needed a new battery, and I had to adjust the bracelet to fit my wrist properly. It's a big hit with everyone who has seen it - Not a scratch on the crystal, and it keeps reasonably good time.
    Excellent video as always, Marshall. I find it fascinating that a working mechanical watch could be manufactured for sale at $2 or so even as late as the 1960s. My first watch was a Timex, in about 1970. It ran well for a while until I lost it. :-)

  • @WeaselJuice
    @WeaselJuice 4 года назад +64

    Lol! If you can service this movement, you can probably service any movement. Great video!

    • @bmxerkrantz
      @bmxerkrantz 2 года назад +8

      If it wasn't for the mainspring, he could just plop the assembled movement in the cleaner. All oiling spots are accessible easily since it's just two plates.
      Edit: mainspring on them are coated and don't need lubrication. At least when they timex they were.

  • @wadehampton1534
    @wadehampton1534 2 года назад +5

    Marshall, I'm sixty-one years old, and I have had several Mickey Mouse watches when I was a boy. It was on every kids wishlist the first time we visited The Magic Kingdom (Disneyland)! My first watch was a Timex mechanical movement boys watch, that I received as a gift for my sixth birthday. In the 70's, Timex went to Quartz movements, and flooded the market with cheap quartz watches.
    Imagine my surprise this year, when I discovered that Timex was making quality mechanical watches, with Twenty-one Jewels. They have two collections, "The Waterbury" and "The Marlin". I bought one of each, and I couldn't have been more pleased with them they cost $87 + tax, and I sprang $15 each for the four year extended warranty ($115 each, delivered). The movement is Japanese with a transparent back, and the calfskin band and stainless steel case is made in China.
    I took comfort in the fact that the movement is Japanese, as a society, the Japanese have a very strong conviction to quality in workmanship and materials. Perhaps I'm being naive, but I'm not sure I would have bought them if movement was made in China too. Time will tell (no pun intended), as I enjoy the nostalgia of wearing a mechanical movement Timex watch, like the first one I ever owned!

  • @JamieBainbridge
    @JamieBainbridge 2 года назад +2

    This is the kind of watch you can understand a professional watchmaker saying it's not worth the bother fixing, but with your voiceover (and a bit sped up) it made a good enthusiast video. Well done!

  • @rolfkarlstad4015
    @rolfkarlstad4015 2 года назад +8

    I find this interesting enough to mention my own story. I had one of these in the late 70's and into the very early 80's. I was wearing it while fishing and got it a bit wet.
    I ... This was the first watch I ever worked on or opened up, and I guess it absolutely killed off my ambition to be a watchmaker :) Little did I know, at age 7, that this movement could not be serviced, other than in the hands of an expert on a mission.

  • @johnmckinstry8546
    @johnmckinstry8546 3 года назад +12

    Thanks for this video. I too had read somewhere that the movement was riveted and that it couldn't be serviced. The reassembly looks incredibly fiddly but hand off to Timex for designing a watch which was different from the others of its day and that is still going 60 years later. Thanks again!

  • @kenfuller9907
    @kenfuller9907 2 года назад +1

    Thanks to this video I got up the courage to take the back off a timex marlin bought off eBay a few years ago. It’s now ticking beautifully

  • @randymilano
    @randymilano 3 года назад +3

    I messed around with restoring this era movement. I found the original Timex service manuals for the M24 And they actually didn’t pull the movements apart to service them. It was just a 5 min swish in lighter fluid, 5 min in alcohol, and then lubricate. Worked shockingly well. I did try and pull them apart like this many many times. Always gave up in defeat because I breathed as you said and watched the pallet fork fly!

  • @speedysteve9121
    @speedysteve9121 3 года назад +4

    Timex made excellent watches.

  • @comicandothercons658
    @comicandothercons658 Год назад +8

    amazing, this is the first of all the watch repair/restoration videos (by you or anyone else) that was made on a non uber expensive watch brand, thank you for this! 🙏 great work as always!!! 😉

  • @MrKenny777
    @MrKenny777 3 года назад +5

    Excellent video. When all is said and done, the watch lasted nearly 50 years which isn't too bad at all.

    • @johnfranklin5277
      @johnfranklin5277 2 года назад +1

      This watch most likely ran for a COUPLE, years, and sat in a drawer for 50 years.

  • @ScottGrammer
    @ScottGrammer Год назад +2

    My first watch was a Timex my father and I picked out of a case in a drug store in 1970, the year I entered first grade. I had it up until 2003 (a separation from my ex caused me to lose many things I wanted to keep), and in 2003 it still ran and kept decent time. The crystal was so scratched up you could barely see through it, and the band was ragged out, but the dang thing ran.

  • @paulschumacker9901
    @paulschumacker9901 3 года назад +16

    Another fantastic video! These inexpensive watches can be really tricky to reassemble. I serviced an old Roskopf pocket watch with a similar pin lever pallet and it took HOURS to refit the top bridge. Those pivots just didn’t want to seat. But as you said, it’s a wonderful feeling of success when it finally comes together!

  • @chopin65
    @chopin65 4 года назад +69

    Robert Langdon, the main character in "The Da Vinci Code", wears a Mickey Mouse watch. Now, I shall have to watch it, again. 😁
    Great video. You are really cool, man. You are so positive. I like all the new things that I am learning.
    Thank you.

    • @SuperDRYDfruit
      @SuperDRYDfruit 4 года назад +7

      Lol that’s funny. Ignatius J Reilly, the main character of a Confederacy of Dunces, wears one too. Apparently it’s a common watch in the world of fiction.

    • @chopin65
      @chopin65 4 года назад +5

      @@SuperDRYDfruit OMG! That is my favorite book! You're right. I can picture him in my mind, his pockets jammed with hot dogs.
      Cool.

    • @truthfulkarl
      @truthfulkarl 3 года назад +1

      i was about to ask if robert dropped his off for restoration lol!

    • @fgb3126
      @fgb3126 2 года назад +2

      One must be very positive indeed to live in Seattle.

    • @tsr7198
      @tsr7198 2 года назад +1

      @@SuperDRYDfruit I absolutely love that book! Tragic history for the author. Sad, he was brilliant!

  • @trek520rider2
    @trek520rider2 2 года назад +39

    As an old manufacturing hand it's intriguing to wonder how these were assembled in the tens of thousands. Maybe they had a device that you fed parts into that put them in place on one plate and held them while the other plate was attached. It's hard to envisage rows and rows of people doing what you just did.

    • @selkiemaine
      @selkiemaine 2 года назад +7

      Yeah, it's all about the jigs and fixtures. I used to design and implement manufacturing processes - it's amazing how the right set of tools makes it all just happen.

    • @LeChristEstRoi
      @LeChristEstRoi 2 года назад +3

      I've been wondering the same thing too!

    • @life_with_bernie
      @life_with_bernie 2 года назад +12

      Something my old watchmaker boss said to me once when I asked why he had a demagnetizer (given how most watch parts were non-ferrous) probably applies here. He said some of the cheap old movements had steel parts that could get magnetized, and that some were assembled using magnets to hold things in place during assembly and then demagnetized during final assembly and packaging. I'll bet this is one of those movements he spoke about.
      Note: No, I never became a watchmaker. I had an after-school job in his shop cleaning the display cases, floors, etc. and he taught me a little because I was studying machine shop and machinery design in high school. Sitting here watching Marshall work, explaining things as he goes, is a lot like watching Mr. Constantine, my old Turkish boss, just without some of the Turkish curses when springs go flying.

  • @youregrammersucks
    @youregrammersucks Год назад +5

    I can’t explain how reassured I am that the pain I experienced servicing two “dollar” pin lever pocket watches was not *solely* because I’m a watch n00b. Putting a bridge (indeed, one entire side of the movement) in place was challenging for all the reasons you discussed… ugh. It’s an experience ;-)

  • @Looey
    @Looey 4 месяца назад

    I am so glad you worked on this Mickey Mouse watch ! I had one when I was about six years old...circa 1959. It may have been a hand me down from one of my brothers...It was fun to wear...had a red plastic strap.

  • @daskraut
    @daskraut Год назад +1

    kinda makes me admire the workers who put these together in the factory.

  • @Rovinman
    @Rovinman 8 месяцев назад

    I used to have one, as a kid, { I'm 77 now, ! }, but in all the many house moves, it got lost !
    I loved that watch ! Didn't know that you could still get them !
    I shall look out for one ! But I won't be taking it apart !
    Thanks SO much for showing this one !
    Stay safe
    Stu xx

  • @tcullen5895
    @tcullen5895 4 года назад +9

    Thanks for posting this. I have one of these on the bench in pieces, so far have not been able to get it back together. Your video is extremely helpful. You have a lot of patience.

  • @aftersexhighfives
    @aftersexhighfives Год назад

    Neat. I have one of these too. My granny got it when she took my aunt and mom to Disney in 69. They saw the moon launch too, which I think was the actual point of the trip. Very cool.

  • @treyc1306
    @treyc1306 6 месяцев назад

    Mickey appreciated your patience and perseverance 🎉

  • @PlumGurly
    @PlumGurly Год назад +1

    That puts a new spin on the phrase, "Slipping someone a mickey."

  • @ordinaryk
    @ordinaryk 4 года назад +29

    From what I've heard, Timex's recommendation to customers was to take the movement out, and keeping it in once piece, dunk the whole thing in a jar of naphta (Zippo lighter fluid, in other words) to clean it. I don't even think they gave recommendations for lubrication (with hardened steel pivot points and no jewels, they might have been dry since the day they were made)

    • @johnmckinstry8546
      @johnmckinstry8546 3 года назад +8

      They did actually produce service manuals for these watches and included recommended lubricants. Originally used Elgin M56B oil or TENNECO #415 oil but later
      updated it to MOBIUS SYNT-A-LUBE oil.

    • @pianofry1138
      @pianofry1138 2 года назад +4

      I think that was an urban myth. I've seen the service manuals that specify lubrication points. That being said Timexs are the lowest priced watches and that method probably would extend their lifespan with a need of a service.

    • @BillAndersonNS
      @BillAndersonNS 2 года назад +5

      @@pianofry1138 "Takes a lickin' and keeps on tickin' !" - John Cameron Swayze

    • @fakiirification
      @fakiirification 2 года назад +1

      that was from the before times. now we have ultrasonic cleaners that would make short work of cleaning that movement if cleaning is all thats wrong with it.

    • @emeraldhill8294
      @emeraldhill8294 Год назад +1

      @@BillAndersonNS Ziegrfeid out of Get Smart/

  • @susanholland3809
    @susanholland3809 3 года назад +4

    I have one just like it. It was bought in the late 60s or early 70s, and it still works. I also have a MM watch from 1935 that works. One of my favorite possessions!

    • @dylan.c.23
      @dylan.c.23 3 года назад +1

      Did these only come out in the 60’s and 70’s really want one just don’t want a fake

  • @robertweldon7909
    @robertweldon7909 2 года назад +2

    As I recall, I could be wrong too, but these watches were made for children, So being inexpensive was the way to go. Children will beat the sand out of a watch, so any that have lasted for very long is quite a nice piece of memorabilia. ;-)

  • @nayto550
    @nayto550 2 года назад +1

    I just bought a non-running M24 movement Timex this morning, having never worked on or seen one. Opened it up and said "WTF?".
    Very serendipitous that I just happened upon this video this afternoon. After watching this, I think I might just replace the whole movement rather than attempting a repair.

  • @Fred100159
    @Fred100159 2 года назад +4

    I did have a Timex when I was a kid and it was riveted.
    Simple design = usually means less moving parts = less things that can go wrong

  • @stevenstewart3414
    @stevenstewart3414 4 месяца назад

    When I was in the Navy, we had a sign on the ET Shack door of the USS Conyngham that said "Miracles While-U-Wait".
    I think you have earned that accolade, Marshall.

  • @arsaeterna4285
    @arsaeterna4285 4 года назад +3

    The bottom balance pivot hole is a screw and it can be unscrewed from the back
    This results in the balance sinking in a bit into the movement, stabilizing it
    The other gears can be wiggled from the open sides with a tweezer until they pop into the pivot holes
    Later you can tighten the balance pivot up and oil, so finicky! awesome video and cute watch : )

  • @clockstr6404
    @clockstr6404 2 года назад +1

    Yes, this is one of the most inconvenient Timex mechanisms for assembly, I assembled it myself 100 times. Bravo for the video!

  • @ronkemperful
    @ronkemperful 2 года назад +2

    When I was ten I had a Timex watch nearly this vintage that ticked so loud that I couldn’t sleep unless I placed it into my sock drawer, with the drawer closed. The watch was durable but it kept lousy time. Interesting video.

  • @gregboren
    @gregboren Год назад

    I have a Mickey Mouse electric from 1971. It does not run and I would give anything to have it running. Mine is the electric Mickey Mouse watch. Wish I could add a picture to this comment. I have some unbelievably cool memories wearing this watch. Thank you for your RUclips’s. I have watched every one of them some more than once.

  • @RongNguoi
    @RongNguoi 6 месяцев назад

    I enjoy watching you work...I enjoy the fact there is no music (which for some reason, people seem to think is necessary for everything) and most of all, you talk not yell...Well done...I had one of these when I was very young, from memory it got binned when it stopped working...

  • @donniebeall8152
    @donniebeall8152 3 года назад +3

    Its always amazing how its always the most simple things are the hardest

  • @scottlarson1548
    @scottlarson1548 2 года назад

    So many kids in the early 70s got these watches for Christmas. In 1973 I remember two kids showing theirs off on the playground after Christmas vacation.

  • @pierrem.martelli5173
    @pierrem.martelli5173 3 года назад +4

    Mon admiration sans réserve pour la patience qu'il aura fallu pour réassembler les deux plateaux ! Hats off !…

  • @dr.s.p.
    @dr.s.p. Год назад +2

    Wow! That was the most counterintuitive watch presentation ever, when one would reasonably expect such a watch to be easy. This presenter portrays seminal work in all his videos’ in subject, expertise, commentary and of course his super photography. Wonderful assistance to a novice such as I, in this, my new and wonderful hobby.

  • @harveyy4492
    @harveyy4492 Год назад

    I had a Timex version of this watch that I got when I was 10 or so. Wore it for several years. Wish I had it now, but alas I don't know where it is. What a blast to see one again.

  • @markwybierala4936
    @markwybierala4936 2 года назад +15

    Congratulations in getting to the end. Sometimes reassembly of something you’ve taken apart is like herding cats. For me, the question that always bothers me is, “how was the assembly was done by the manufacturer?”. Obviously, a watch like this needed to be assembled in under a few minutes to be profitable. My mind wanders looking for answers - was there an assembly jig? - did they apply a distilled water mist and freeze all of the parts in place before laying down the bridge? - a type of wax that was removed by heat? It would be awesome to learn how it was done in the first place.

    • @fredk.2001
      @fredk.2001 Год назад +1

      Wax does sound like a good idea.

  • @maangamandai
    @maangamandai 3 года назад +1

    You are brilliant Mr. Marshall. It is so soothing listening to you.

  • @edith1315
    @edith1315 2 года назад +1

    The Robert Langdon watch! I love that watch

  • @dcxplant
    @dcxplant Год назад +1

    A great watch, as you said a piece of Americana, and you've wonderfully preserved this neat little icon of a watch.

  • @irawolf
    @irawolf 5 месяцев назад

    This was my first wristwatch! I got it as a kindergarten graduation present in 1969 (or 1970?). Now I want to find a functional one. :-)

  • @Timothycan
    @Timothycan 2 года назад +6

    I admire your patience! I don't have a clue how these were assembled en masse back at the factory. I had Timex watches when I was a kid (not Mickey Mouse though), and the insides looked much the same. They had a red seconds hand as well. Usually they lasted a couple of years or so, I think.

  • @HarryFlashmanVC
    @HarryFlashmanVC Год назад +1

    I cannot believe the patience you had in rebuilding that movement.

  • @StephenGoggin
    @StephenGoggin 3 года назад +6

    Fun game: Take a drink every time he tells us how many screws there are...
    But seriously I enjoy your videos. They're very fascinating and I enjoy your enthusiasm. Keep it up!

  • @CBJamo
    @CBJamo 2 года назад

    This watch is in many ways a more magnificent work of engineering than the finest hand made swiss watch in the world. Consider how many hundreds of thousands or even millions of these timex watches did the every day task of letting people know the time, for a cost they could afford, all while giving a little joy through the mickey face. It's easy to make a watch if cost is no object, but making something as delicate as a mechanical watch, while keeping the cost low, that requires engineering.

  • @erneststorch9844
    @erneststorch9844 2 года назад +1

    I have worked on many things not as small of
    coarse .But after working on something the first time
    the second time usually goes a lot better. Knowing what
    is inside helps a lot. You learn the pitfalls. Very cool video and watch. I grew in the 50's and 60's and haveing a Mickey mouse watch was a big deal for a kid.

  • @JordNL
    @JordNL Год назад +2

    I applaud your patience. In my case I'd thrown the watch around the room already. I build computers, but luckily even the M.2 screws aren't that tiny.

  • @Ernestas0001
    @Ernestas0001 4 года назад +19

    You just broke a myth over here. Even though you could call it a bad movement, I am still fascinated by engineering. Bare bones, minimal and purely there for function by leaving only essentials. It took some effort to design this.

    • @kacperpluta3036
      @kacperpluta3036 3 года назад

      Effort? Like what? Swiss watchmakers when they start their education can design more complicated and more accurate movements. Vintage timex sucks, nothing more to say.

    • @SaxonSuccess
      @SaxonSuccess 3 года назад +5

      @@kacperpluta3036 You miss his point beautifully.

    • @sandukanec
      @sandukanec 3 года назад +2

      The idea of mechanical watches is to last. This watch is the beginning of cost savings. Cheap watch with cheap materials. Just like the cars these days :) But i can agree that they put a lot of effort, to make something cheap that is working :D It is somehow craftsmenship!

    • @noobfl
      @noobfl 3 года назад +2

      @@kacperpluta3036 you miss the point of these timex movements. its not about complication or highly decorated, high end movements, its about making a movement as cheap, mass producable and reliable as possible. Timex never wants to be Pathek Phillipe, and build impressive watches for tons of money for a few people. Timex wants to produce watches that everyone can afford, so they must be cheap, massproduced and somewhat reliable. And for this goal, you need a lot of skills, not only for whatchmaking, but to create the machines needet, to setup a production line and so on. its funny, that you mentioned swiss watchmaking, because, what saves swiss watchmaking for diying out was swatch, and swatch had the same goal as timex: produce cheap, reliable massproduced and affordable watches with a higly sophisticated production line and automatation on every possible level. swatch even perfectioniced this efford with the sistem51, an automatic watch thats builded completly by machines with no human interactions and held together with just one screw.

  • @kingoftadpoles
    @kingoftadpoles 2 года назад +4

    I've been inspired by your videos to take a look at a small collection of watches which have been sitting in a plastic bag in a drawer. They are mostly small wristwatches, but there are a couple of inherited pocket watches. I wasn't sure of the safety status of the military one, so I tried the other and it turned out to be something like this Mickey Mouse watch. Basically it has 2 plates, no jewels and a tabbed face. I established the end of the mainspring is broken, and somehow the minute hand is missing. Today I managed to find a possible donor watch in a charity shop for just 5GBP, about 6.5USD.

    • @nikolaslarson6891
      @nikolaslarson6891 5 месяцев назад

      Brilliant video! All watches merit some attention but it's difficult to reach a deeper level of understatement in this case. Luv it!

  • @darthtruk7206
    @darthtruk7206 2 года назад +1

    I got one of these kind of watches when I was a kid. It was a more modern version, I think it was a quartz movement. Loved that watch, so cool to see how long they’ve been around

  • @phadungthaich.891
    @phadungthaich.891 2 года назад +1

    I really like your voice and laugh during fluenly words spoken made so relaxing. Thanks a lot, pls.made more clips.

  • @Oddzilla51
    @Oddzilla51 Год назад +3

    I think it's cool that something so uncomplicated and inexpensive can still be serviced. My every day wear watch is just a minimalist quartz movement. I just want the time and for it to look decent. I truly appreciate mechanical and all other types of watches and the complications, but sometimes, I just need to know the time and I don't like having to pull out my phone for it when I don't need to do anything else.

  • @coffeeisgood102
    @coffeeisgood102 2 года назад

    I would really like to speak with someone who actually worked at the bench putting the movement together. There must have been tools made specifically to help line up the wheels and pivots. There is no way that more than 5 minutes was allocated to the build given that Timex spit out thousands per month. Thanks for sticking with this project and not giving up.

  • @ELotion
    @ELotion Месяц назад

    I just picked up this watch at my local antique fair for $5. Time is off by at most 45+s. Very stoked with my find and amped on your video!

  • @varrunningtrains4112
    @varrunningtrains4112 2 года назад +3

    Please do more Timex watches! This is the best video on a Timex movement I've seen yet!

    • @WristwatchRevival
      @WristwatchRevival  2 года назад +3

      I don't know if I want to!

    • @varrunningtrains4112
      @varrunningtrains4112 2 года назад +2

      @@WristwatchRevival I don't blame you! Looks like Mickey almost got the best of you!

  • @MrBanzoid
    @MrBanzoid 2 года назад +1

    When I was a kid I had a Roy Rogers watch. There was an extended pivot on the pallet fork which held a gun which waggled up and down in time to the ticking.

  • @AutomotiveEvangelist
    @AutomotiveEvangelist 2 года назад +1

    I got a bunch of these pin lever movements (though Swiss, not American) in an eBay auction figuring they would be a 'fun' way to learn watchmaking. Little did I realize that this is basically an implement for self-torture. I've gotten almost all of them running again, though had to acquire a few parts movements along the way. Some are better designed for repair than others, but at least it was a cheap way to get into the hobby without destroying any really nice watches in the process. When you finally work on an actual jeweled movement, it's like night and day for degree of difficulty, so maybe it was a blessing in disguise.

  • @adamjudis
    @adamjudis 6 месяцев назад

    Wow, that was the first watch I ever owned, my grandfather got it for me when I was very young. Unfortunately my home was burglarized a few years ago and it got stolen, but so cool to see it again and the inner workings of it. Thx for sharing.

  • @joewebb1663
    @joewebb1663 Год назад

    This video really shows how the cheaper the watch the harder it is to work on

  • @1978garfield
    @1978garfield Год назад +1

    It is cool that you can appreciate it for what it is.
    I have seen so many watch collectors go on and on about how anything made by Timex is garbage and should be thrown away.
    I can see why no one will work on them.
    I love a lot of the old Timex designs.
    No one in my life was wearing a Rolex, Omega or even a Seiko.
    I have memories of Timex and other low end watches.

  • @sh1nyarm0r
    @sh1nyarm0r 27 дней назад

    The movement is model 100, the one used by Timex to train new recruits. It has the fewest number of parts of all Timex models. if I remember my Timex days, the rumor is that the model 100 has only 100 parts. We do have a rework line for model 100 movement. A rework line can include parts from watches returned by mail. True, Timex factory workers wear masks to prevent your breath blowing piece parts away. The holes on the balance wheel is made automatically by a machine called vibrograph. I enjoy your show. Thanks.

  • @Semeyaza
    @Semeyaza 2 года назад +1

    I had one of these as my first real watch when I was a kid... probably got it for my fifth birthday. In 81... damn but how time flies...

  • @momtomany
    @momtomany 2 года назад

    Oh, I loved these when I was a kid!!! Always wanted one!!
    You didn’t let Mickey defeat you!!!

  • @1967250s
    @1967250s 3 года назад +20

    Fun job there. Wondering if you may have assembled it upside down, as in, install the movements on the back plate first? There must have been an easy way to get the wheels aligned easily for such a mass produced watch.

  • @nrbudgen
    @nrbudgen 8 месяцев назад

    I used to do contract work for a local MM distributor and repaired hundreds of these watches. Some used Timex movements but others used BFG and EB calibers. The Timex movements changed over the years and one version used a bronze click which often wore out making it impossible to wind. Mainspring failures were rare. The center post wasn't the same size in all versions so the cannon pinion, hour wheel and hand holes weren't always interchangeable. Some movements weren't able to run again for whatever reason so I found that a quick way to identify the dead ones was to put all that weren't ticking into the cleaning machine. Those that came out ticking were repairable. Needless to say, not my favorite watches to work on but with experience they weren't too bad. IIRC, Timex movements made before the mid 60s were lubricated with Nye's porpoise jaw oil until it was outlawed. Someone mentioned cleaning the movement in lighter fluid and then oiling, but getting at the balance cups wasn't easy without getting oil on the hairspring if the plates hadn't been separated.

  • @josephstratti52
    @josephstratti52 Год назад +1

    Very clever to get that full plate over all those pivots without doing any damage to those arbors.

  • @virgiliotoledano-ud6hp
    @virgiliotoledano-ud6hp Год назад

    I like it. Simple yet it touches the basic restoration of an American icon.

  • @imopman
    @imopman 2 года назад +1

    Actually nice to see a watch like this , really makes you appreciate the finer ones.

  • @BobbyIronsights
    @BobbyIronsights Год назад +1

    Somehow this was just as satisfying to watch as one of the Rolex videos

  • @dingus153
    @dingus153 Год назад

    Disney would never even dream about releasing something this high quality in 2023

  • @AmunRa2024
    @AmunRa2024 2 года назад

    You're correct, the Fact that theres no Jewel friction and still runs smoothly is Amazing.

  • @bsimpson6204
    @bsimpson6204 4 года назад +2

    I did so enjoy watching that, well done on getting that plate back on the pivots.

  • @JSAnstock
    @JSAnstock Год назад +1

    The reassembly of this watch would make the perfect final exam for an anger management course 🙂. Remarkable display of patience by Marshall.