Received as a bday present for my Omega. Worked well since it’s not a watch I’m wearing everyday. Also nice to know it’s wound once done it’s cycle in the winder. It’s a watch that moves with wrist movement too so winder was ideal for a watch that stops after such little use
I have two of these Mozsly devices to manage the power reserve of 5 quality automatic watches. I tend to rotate the watches according to when they were last worn and by their power reserve. I switch on the winders for around 8-10 hrs a day (not always the same watch naturally) and they keep all pieces ticking along very nicely. Super quiet, not silly money and very reliable, they can run on two AA batteries without the hassle of plugging into the mains and I've found them to last for over two months using them on the standard bi-directional 650TPD setting. They cannot overwind a decent watch - if that was the case and you wear an auto watch daily, it would break in no time. If you are going away for a long time and are not taking all your collection (who does lol), just let the watches wind down, stop and rest. it will do no harm at all.
Thanks. I was curious about the lifespan of batteries and you answered my question. Got one of those this morning and it seems like a decent piece of kit.
Just bought this Mozsly Winder in Carbon Fiber finish. Works very well so far. Dead silent. I like it so far and feel it is worth the money as long as it lasts. Looks very classy as well. I live in Canada where our dollar SUCKS! Cost was $115.99 + 5% Tax on Amazon. I used a gift card of $50.00 so that helped.
No watch on wrist Matt!😅😅Good video. Im getting a watch winder soon for when my watchmaker services or regulates speed on my watch not to have to constantly wear for a full week but put in the winder. If you think about it you can't over wind a watch. For example you wear your automatic watch everyday for a month. Essentially when you take it off at night is the rest period. Same with rest period in winder on rest period. Great video and cool winder.👍👍👍👍💯
I do have a watch winder but only use it very sparingly, like you I have no wish to keep an automatic watch constantly running & winding. Good video Matt.👍
Very nice winder .I have 4 box winders stacked and linked together .Like you say I never leave watches turning permenantly just the next 4 watches for the week ahead
I've had my seiko monster and tuna on winders for about 8 years each (lowest setting). Neither has ever been serviced and they still keep great time and work flawlessly. All my newer watches are on winders as well. I used to buy into the "watch winders are bad" hype but as I talked to more enthusiasts OUTSIDE of the internet echo chamber it became clear that it's a bunch of bullshit. If having a winder enables you to enjoy all of your watches more regularly then do it, and ignore the bro-science scare mongerers.
Thank you! It’s a Muhle Glashutte S.A.R Flieger chronograph. It’s a great watch. It also comes on a rubber strap which is very comfortable and has a piece to make it flush with the case. I love how the chronograph pusher and crown come off the left side of case. I’ve been meaning to make a review of it…
Woah, I definitely need to look at how that works. Sounds like rotational inertia and momentum would play a role in how that works but I'm just guessing. If I never saw this video I would think it was a lie
@@nicekid76 This is my favorite video for how mechanical watches work: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-rL0_vOw6eCc.html An automatic watch just has a weighted rotor attached to it with a series of gears that wind it instead of relying on the crown being rotated. If you look at an automatic watch with an exhibition back (like the Seiko shown ;)) you can see the actual rotor.
I've got SIX of these damn things... they're complete crap. All six have stopped working in less than a year. I understand sometimes you get a dud but SIX DUDS?! Come on...