Original title: Mechanical Watch
Article
The post is an interactive, step-by-step mechanical watch teardown that follows one movement from raw mainspring to finished, wearable mechanism. It starts with energy storage in the barrel spring system, then shows why direct drive would spin the hands too fast and why a multi-stage gear train is needed to reach the required second-hand cadence while also reducing torque. It then details the escapement, showing how the escape wheel and pallet fork meter power release to the balance wheel and how jewel pivots, slip pivots, and force reduction across the train stabilize timing and reduce wear. The balance and hairspring section explains frequency tuning via spring stiffness and inertia, and how the impulse, locking, and impulse jewel geometry maintain oscillation around ~28,800 bph. The piece continues with assembly-level details of the mainplate, jewel bearings, bridges, lubrication, motion works, date complication, and keyless works that let one crown perform winding, time setting, and date setting while adding safety via haptic stops and a hacking lever. It also covers click-based winding direction control, automatic winding with a unidirectional reverser to harvest wrist motion, and the practical constraint that automatic modules need daily movement to stay charged. The final perspective is historical and engineering-first: mechanical watches are less accurate and less convenient than quartz or smart devices but remain enduring examples of precision micro-mechanics and design elegance. The post is framed as a learning resource rather than a sales pitch, with clear attention to the function of each component and tradeoffs in reliability, serviceability, and energy management.
Commenters largely praise the work as a rare, high-quality educational explanation and credit its clarity for making a deeply mechanical topic approachable. Several readers express renewed appreciation for mechanical and automatic watches, often tying it to personal habits, repair skills, and watchwearing culture. Community members value the broader watchmaking context, adding references to repair guides, historical documentaries, and channels such as Wristwatch Revival and chronovaengineering. Many discuss practical distinctions between watch types, noting automatic watches’ convenience versus battery maintenance and alternative power sources like solar and radio/GPS. Some participants share hobby-level enthusiasm such as building or repairing movements, emphasizing craftsmanship and the overlap between watch and clock repair traditions. A few comments highlight known quirks and historical context, including an animation date bug and the author’s infrequent posting cadence. Others appreciate the supportive ecosystem around the work, including Patreon-backed production and extensive archives, while also speculating about recurring prominence on front page cycles.