Mechanisms — watchmaking

Recent Blogs

Watch Train diagram
Watch Train Mechanism Explained: Going Train Gear Ratios, Parts, Formula & Calculator
Watch train explained: the gear chain that steps mainspring torque down to the balance wheel in mechanical watches, with ratios, examples, and design tradeoffs.
Watch Stop diagram
Watch Stop Mechanism: How the Hacking Lever Works, Parts, Diagram and Calculator
How a watch stop mechanism halts the balance wheel when you pull the crown — design rules, hacking lever geometry, and failure modes for watchmakers.
Watch Regulator diagram
Watch Regulator Mechanism: How Curb Pins Tune Hairspring Rate, Parts and Diagram Explained
Watch regulator explained — how the regulator lever shifts the hairspring's effective length to fine-tune rate, with worked examples for watchmakers and restorers.
Compensation Balance diagram
Compensation Balance Mechanism Explained: How the Bimetallic Wheel Corrects Temperature Error
How a Compensation Balance corrects temperature rate error in mechanical watches and chronometers — bimetallic theory, formulas, worked example, and design tradeoffs.
Going Train diagram
Going Train Mechanism Explained: How Clock and Watch Gear Trains Work, Parts, Ratios & Diagram
Going Train explained: how the clock train transmits power from mainspring to escapement, gear ratios, real horology examples, and design tradeoffs.
Wheel Train diagram
Wheel Train Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Gear Ratio Formula, Parts, and Horology Uses
Wheel train mechanics explained — gear ratios, torque multiplication, and horology examples. Engineer-grade guide for clockmakers, watchmakers, and machine builders.
Tourbillon diagram - how do they work
Tourbillon Mechanism Explained: How the Rotating Cage Works, Parts, Diagram, and Uses
Tourbillon mechanism explained — how the rotating escapement cage cancels gravity error in mechanical watches, with formulas, tolerances and worked examples.
Hairspring diagram
Hairspring Mechanism Explained: How It Works, Parts, Diagram, and Watch Oscillator Formula
How a hairspring works in mechanical watches and instruments — geometry, isochronism, balance regulation, and real-world tolerances from horology and aerospace.