@@rasputinscastle The spinning motion replicate an individual wearing the watch. Then will also automatically wind the watch up and see if there are any errors in my service/disassembly of the watch. If it stops even while on a winder, then it’s an obvious issue that’s a Watches of working. But if it continues to run without losing or gaining a significant amount of time, then I know the Watch and the service is complete.
I don't get why you need that?😊
I am a watchmaker. I use it to test the watches I have recently serviced.
@@markcoffman494 how does spinning it test it?
@@rasputinscastle
The spinning motion replicate an individual wearing the watch. Then will also automatically wind the watch up and see if there are any errors in my service/disassembly of the watch. If it stops even while on a winder, then it’s an obvious issue that’s a Watches of working. But if it continues to run without losing or gaining a significant amount of time, then I know the Watch and the service is complete.
@@markcoffman494 awesome. Thanks for taking the time to answer. 😊
@@rasputinscastle you are so welcome