Bulova 1963 Jet Clipper

Submitted by Wade R on February 9, 2017 - 11:49pm
N
Manufacture Year
1963
Movement Model
11AFAC
Movement Jewels
17
Movement Serial No.
-
Case Serial No.
G562408
Case shape
Round
Case color
White
Case Manufacturer
Bulova
Gender
Mens
Watch Description

Got this one with the Shriners Watch. Another good looking working round self winding.

1963 Bulova Jet Clipoer N watch
1963 Bulova watch
1963 Bulova watch
1963 Bulova watch
1963 Bulova watch
Wade R
Posted February 10, 2017 - 9:30am

Yep I think so. Jet Clipper N

Reverend Rob
Posted February 10, 2017 - 10:30am

Jet Clipper she be for me. 'N'.

jabs
Posted February 10, 2017 - 1:35pm

+1

Geoff Baker
Posted February 11, 2017 - 7:26am

Jet Clipper N works for me too. This one is in REALLY nice shape, looks like it didn't get out much!

JP
Posted February 11, 2017 - 7:50pm

+1

Wade R
Posted December 25, 2019 - 11:18pm

I wore it several times and was careful winding it per instructions. It quit working recently. Any ideas what happens to these? Over wound perhaps? Where is a good place to send it to check it out?

Reverend Rob
Posted December 28, 2019 - 10:43am

In reply to by Wade R

Overwinding is a myth.

If a watch or clock is wound up tight but does not run, that is an indicator that something is wrong. With clocks, the wear and tear is metal- on- metal, and at full wind the mechanism is telling you it is worn to the point of jamming. 

With watches, there are jewels (usually) to mitigate the wear, but these can also get full of dirt or the lubricant will dry out, and the watch stops. With automatic watches, the loss of eleasticity and wear of the mainspring against the barrel can cause 'mainspring creep,' which means the watch does not wind itself properly while worn. Hand winding these can sometimes make it worse, especially if you hand wind them to full and cause the mainsring to slip on a regular basis. This additional wear to an already worn system will eventually cause the watch to not hold much power at all. 

There is braking grease on the inside of the automatic watch barrel, and when that dries out, the wear of the bridle against the walls of the barrel is increased. Mainsprings also become 'set,' which means they no longer have the same modulus of elasticity and therefore less power. 

There are 200 reasons why the watch stops, as Donald DeCarle used to say. Lack of service leads to all kinds of issues. 

I'm going to invent a time machine and go back and find the guy who originaly made up the overwinding myth. I have heard this thousands of times in my shop by well-meaning customers, and it is one of those stories that just gets perpetuated, like the one about car batteries on a concrete floor.*

*OK, before anyone asks, batteries do not slowly discharge because they are on a concrete floor, they discharge because there is a buildup of dirt and gunk on the top that has electrolyte in it or electrolytic properties, causing a small, drawn out short circuit. This has been debunked many times but keeps springing back up like a King Dandelion in your backyard...

Geoff Baker
Posted December 28, 2019 - 9:52pm

In reply to by Reverend Rob

.....dang it Rob, you mean I spent all weekend moving the batteries...

PS- don't say anything about Santa man, just don't even go there!