The King has entered the blog;) In the 1960’s Seiko wanted too show the world what they where capable of making. Seiko created two marques that would be produced at two different factories that could internaly compete to make the best watch. The Suwa factory produced the Grand Seiko and Daini facotry made the King Seiko. This internal rivalry lead to Seiko producing advanced Hi-beat monsters that were out-performing the top swiss brands when it came to accuracy. This lasted into the quarts revolution where both lines had King and Grand quartz, but after some time both lines where discontinued. In 1998 Seiko relaunched the Grand Seiko, but that’s a different story;)
I always liked the look of the Seiko calibre 44 with it’s micro regulator and balance bridge. So I could not resist when I found something that looked like a decent example.
I have removed the dial and hands and you can see the setting/winding mechanism. The funny thing is someone replaced a broken setting lever spring, but did not notice the broken off piece from the old setting lever spring:P
Lower barrel arbor hole is also jewelled, but not the upper. Notice the thin layer of oily substance all over the movement.
I wanted to replace the crystal. I realised after removing the old crystal that I did not have a die that could press the bezel ring back onto the case when fitting the new crystal.
My problem was the old dies were too shallow and would hit the crystal before actually pressing the bezel ring down. The solution was to machine out an old die so it was deeper.
