This has been a LONG STANDING query of mine (50 YEARS!) - thank you SO MUCH for being the person to finally address it. I didn't even know what it was called until today!! THREE THUMBS UP! (where is that other thumb? I know I had it somewhere!)
Excellent video!!! I have seen a broken Omega Speedmaster that got the pallet fork stuck because of backhacking. It ended up getting the pallet fork replaced
There is a big difference between applying just enough pressure when the watch spring is not fully wound to stop the movement, and trying to force the movement backwards!. It is this that damages the watch. Common sense guys. Even Omega know this they just don't take into account how ham fisted people can be. Great vid Mark thank you.
i can't imagine you're wearing the clutch with back hacking. it *slides* when you set time, but when you back hack you transfer torque without sliding. no sliding no rubbing no wear this video cleared up a lot of detail that mostly people don't talk about. you can describe most of a watch by talking about the going train because that takes you all the way from power to balance wheel, so i was confused about the point of departure between the two trains, the time set mechanism, and of course the clutch. so thanks a bunch
Thanks for putting in the time and effort into making this video. I have been back hacking my 007, Orange Monster and Samurai for years, but I always wondered if it was somehow damaging the movement. You have put my mind at ease. Thank you again.
Thanks for the info, Marc! I back-hack my 7s26 movements, but something instinctively told me to just hold the second hand stationary...not make it run backwards. Liked hearing that confirmed by you.
It's funny, I asked myself this very question and I think you hit upon the crucial point at around 15'40". I am not a watchmaker, but I am a huge enthusiast and love to think about watch movements. I mentally followed the act of back-hacking and I also feel that it's all about the interaction of the pallet jewels and the escapement. The entry jewel and the exit jewel would essentially be reversing roles. The biggest issue, I think, would be that the jewels would instead of receiving and imparting force on their blunt faces, would instead be raking along the wrong side of each escapement tine, but on the points of the jewels, not the blunt faces. I am right? I'm just an enthusiast, so I would like to hear from an expert. I have a couple of Seiko 5s with this movement. In fact, they are my "nicest" watches. I don't spend much money on watches, I just have fun bringing old Timexs back to life, Caravelles, etc.
Great video. I discovered this by accident on my new SKX007, which convinced me not to change the stock movement. Love these videos. Please keep 'em going. Thanks
I think you should make a video on the different movements and how they compare to ETA. For example, Selita, STP, Soprod, and ISA. I have been quite impressed with the Selita in my Oris.
Very informative Mark! I've honestly learnt so much from this series of videos, great content as always, keep up the good work Sir... greetings from N.Ireland 👍
I always wondered why my Timex Expedition North field watch did that. I never knew back hacking was a "thing," but after watching your video I now know it's normal. Thanks for making great YT content!
You are Genius ... Many reviewers talked about it but a seperate video and covering it in watch and learn is a genius ideas...I am sure lot of people will learn from it now
With my inexpensive Seiko, it is hard to set the desired time (e.g., +15 seconds), because it runs unpredictably for a couple of days. Once it stabilizes, I can no longer stop the seconds hand.
@PacoTaco0404040 I would guess not. The way I understand it, as the mainspring winds up (as it does from wearing it and an automatic won't overwind itself), the watch gets harder to backhack because backhacking involves overcoming the torque of the mainspring. When you backhack, you rotate the movement such that the mainspring rotates in the winding direction (when the movement runs normally, the mainspring is unwinding). So when a watch is fully wound, you may not be able to backhack it because to do so, you need to overcome the spring's torque. With a fully wound spring, that may not be possible.
I enjoy these learning videos a lot, even though I haven't a clue what you're talking about half the time. Watching these videos, for me, is like looking at the movement in operation through an exhibition caseback. I have no clue what's going on, but it's mesmerizing to view.
Why back hack? Is this the solution to my daily nightmare of adjusting the time on a Seiko skx009? I'll admit that I'm obsessed with starting my day with being no more than one second off. Great lesson, as always Marc.
Thanks for the tutorial, I've been wondering about this. I discovered back-hacking recently when I got my first mechanical watch. I found I could make the seconds hand stop and even move backwards but wondered if it could be harmful to the watch. After a bit of experimentation and after seeing your explanation, I've decided it really isn't worth the trouble and risk. When I go to get a stopped watch going, I just wait for the seconds hand on my reference timepiece to nearly match the position of the seconds hand on the stopped watch. At that point I give it a bit of the "Seiko shake" to get it running. After a bit of practice I can get it moving within a couple of seconds of the reference, and that is certainly good enough. Then I just set the minutes and hours hands to the correct values. No back hacking necessary.
This is why I bought a watch from you Mark, I found out about back-hacking recently and wanted to try it...now I know I shouldn't. Great video, many thanks!
I NEED SOME HELP OVER HERE! I was just taking photos of my Seiko 5 Sports (SNZD67K1 - Caliber 7S36A), and i was placing the hands at 10:10 (AM, not PM) and accidentaly i turned the crown backwards to 10:09am or 10:07am and while doing that, first, i noticed the seconds hand going backwards, it never stoped, and then i heard a click which i also felt it in the crown and then the seconds hand started to go clockwise again. That click actually frightened me a bit, i thought a gear got damaged and that the watch wouldn't change the day-&-date by itself, or that the palet fork was broken. I started to move the hands manually to see if it changed the day-&-date, it did. The seconds hand didn't get stuck, i didn't feel any clicks while doing that, then i placed the hands at 7:50am to change the day-&-date maually, it worked. It was a relief. Sort of... Now, after pulling the crown just one click to set the day or the date (not between 9pm and 4am as stated in the user's manual), and then pulling the crown out another click, when i move the crown forward to set up the time, instantly i feel and hear another click, similar to the one described above, but now i just don't know if that's meant to happen or if there's a damaged gear. This happened arround 40min ago.
Mark, thank you so much for this. I always suspected that going backwards was not a good idea - now I know exactly why! I don't set my watches to the second anyway, but my SKX013 will for sure never get a back hack from me anymore :) Cheers!
@@islandwatch I have an old Russian Poljot where to change the date its required to go backwards and forwards between 7 and 12 constantly (the watch only has 1 crown postion). Doing this causes the second hand to go backwards a bit. I wonder how how much effect it has on the movement giving that this is considered the "correct" way to change the date.
Great video Marc. I always wondered how back hacking worked. Like how the sound gets a little louder when you zoom in (3:55). Gives the viewer that "i'm getting closer" feeling.
I found this video quite fascinating, thank you! My first automatic watch was a cheap Orient Mako I got new for about $80. IIRC it has one of the Seiko movements that is not wind-able nor hackable. A few months ago I accidentally discovered it was back-hackable. I had no idea that was a thing until I saw this video, but I was fascinated I could set it exactly with my two other wind-able, hackable Maratac watches. It's cool to understand the how and why, and how amazing the workings of these watches are.
Having used quartz (or just wind-up) watches previously (as in many, many years ago) when I got started with automatics I wanted to set the time EXACTLY to see how accurate the watch is ... And because I wanted the EXACT time. Quartz watches had spoiled me in that regard but of course quartz means batteries so I started using automatics and discovered something. Hacking an automatic is useless. Because any automatic watch I can afford isn't going to be accurate enough for a time hack to have any useful purpose past a few days. Unless I want to hack those automatics every day and in the case of non-hacking movements fiddle around with back hacking them, they're never going to benefit from hacking. So why does this matter? Because I'm an amateur astronomy buff and I also use my watch for celestial navigation practice. Both of those pursuits require as accurate a time hack as you can get. So along came Citizen Eco-drives and I got the best of both worlds in a watch. Then along came smart phones (etc.) and now it doesn't really matter because anything with GPS is time synchronized with the GPS satellites exactly in order to work properly.. If I absolutely HAVE to get a +/- one second time hack I just lay my phone on the _____ (bench, table, nav station countertop, etc.) Now I'm free to wear whatever watch suits me at the time no matter what movement it uses. If I have calculated that I need to maintain a tack for an hour and a half any good automatic is accurate enough for that and way, way more convenient than trying to check time on an expensive phone that can slip out of my hands and into Davy Jones' locker in an instant. I still wear a watch to tell time at a glance and I always will. Pulling out a phone to check the time is just a rude heathen move as far as I'm concerned. I like my watches to be accurate and I virtually NEVER buy a watch for the "bling" factor, though I will choose among my watches to suit the occasion, watches are always first and foremost timepieces as far as I'm concerned -- The purpose of me wearing a watch is to tell time as a primary factor by a large percentage so I like accurate, well made watches. But I'm never going to bother with back-hacking any automatic watch I own ever again.
I love these. It was very helpful not just to learn about back hacking, but also how the gears work to move the hands (which helps to explain why they attach the way they do). Thank you.
Interesting. So when the crown is pulled and you don't touch it, all the hands should still be moved by the movement and the crown should be slowly rotating with them. And the added friction could perhaps slow down the movement a bit. I think I'll try this, since my watch is running faster, so every time I need to set the time it's a bit backwards, which I don't want to directly and to revolve everything forwards is a pain..
Thank you for the video! It answered a question I’ve had for quite some time now, and needed an answer from a reputable source. One question, when setting time to the second, what is the best source to use for accurate time?
if you really care that much about accuracy that you set your mechanical watch to the second , can i recommend a quartz or radio signal watch for the future . i find my cheapish quartzs usually run for several days before deviating a whole second .
Omega coaxial mechanical movements are certified to within a small fraction of a second per day on the better examples in the accuracy tests. I believe this makes them the most accurate movements in the world regardless of cost especially cals. 8800 / 8900 series. (Seiko Spring Drive is electronically regulated and doesn't count).
Hi. What if my SKX runs fast so every few days I need to put it back 1 minute? Is it ok to go backwards? Much easier than going forwards 23hrs, 59 minutes. Cheers! Look forward you your reply Mark.
Hello! Long time listener, first time caller. I just bought a seiko recraft automatic with 7s26 movement but to my knowledge does not back hack or manual wind. Why would there be variance like that within the same movement? Thanks!
After setting the time on a movement with hacking, how many seconds does it normally take for the movement to get back up to full speed after pushing in the crown?
Great video! Good to see in the video what I have suspected for a while. I am particularly careful with vintage watches to avoid doing anything to compromise the cannon pinion friction fitting as i have had that problem with 1960s gruen precision and seikomatic watches. Thanks!
Probably not. You are only exerting enough counter pressure to break the friction grip between the canon pinion and the arbor. It would take some kind of pressure that expanded the inner canon pinion diameter to cause it to be abnormally affected. Sometimes the canon pinion gets crimped too much during servicing and on replacement is too tight on the arbor and it becomes difficult to change the time without affecting the movement gears adversely. It's a delicate connection.
If this isn't bad for the movement, would I be right in thinking that means winding the watch minute hand backwards by a few mins to correct the time shouldn't be bad either (since that's basically what back hacking is)? I've got an SKX013 (7S26) and it tends to run fast. So if I want to correct it I should be fine to just wind back by a couple mins, no need to go forwards by 23h and 58mins (and reset the day/date)?
How do you set the time on a watch with quick set date when it’s running fast? Go forward 24hrs then advance the date a full month? Seems a chore just to set the time back every few weeks when you can just reverse the minute hand a few minutes backwards.
Thanks for explaining that ive always wondered about the parts. Way i see it most 7s26 are +/-20 a day anyway so whats the point i just set mine to whichever minute GMT is at when the watch strikes 12
Excellent video although it bares watching several times at least for me. Is it possible to damage an automatic or manual wind watch turning back the time to set as it's running? Thank you.
If back-hacking is bad, is setting time backwards equally bad? Each movement has its own direction to set the time (a crown rotating direction sets time forward in one movement, would do exactly opposite in another!). I have like 20 watches I rotate through and have not memorized which one is forward direction. Although I never set time backwards, when I start setting it 50% of times I get it wrong direction on first attempt, then I reverse to correct it to set forward. This is the exactly reason why I want to avoid setting time in backwards but I can't, any tips?
1:55 when i bought my first mechanical watch SKX007 and i tried to set up the time, and this happend and i tought i fucked up my watch the first day i was so pissed
For non hacking movement I think you need to perfectly align minute hand and forget about the second hand. The second hand is just a vital sign that the watch is a live and running
Great simple-easy-to-understand explanation. I'm just wondering if these movements were originally built to back hack? Or was it by pure coincidental luck that it is possible? The fact that you shouldn't back hack when it's fully wound w/too much torque, makes it sound like back hacking was not originally intended. But then car breaks basically work on same principle, but you do have to change the shoes once in a while. Just a thought....
What I see is: The issue with going backwards is that you will ruin the pallet fork crystals. The pallet fork crystals have a slight angle on them to advance the escapement. If you reverse this action you are applying force to the back of the pallet fork crystal which can either break the pallet fork crystal or grind the ends off the escapement wheel.
Great explanation Marc. I noticed I could can stop the second hand on my (non-hacking) Citizen auto, but didn't know how it worked. Great content and vid.
Well, I've heard that you "can" IF you have a Flux Capacitor, a De Lorean and get up to 88 1/2 mph...................! Or was that to "go back in time"? Anyway.
I have a misaligned hour hand on my Orient Sentry, it points to the right index about 6 minutes past the hour. I didn't check whether it arrived like this, but someone on a forum suggested, that it might be due to this, mainly the seconds hand moving backwards and possibly some gears skipping teeth. Is it possible?
This is good stuff.Question to you Mark.....When you overcome a friction fit many times you are wearing that pinion to a point the tolerance becomes such that friction is reduced and possibly lost? Am I barking up the wrong tree.I daftly enough have never got my head around how the energy in a mainspring actually converts to the main gearing if that makes sense? Its all incredible engineering frankly! Cheers ,Len.
When I set the day on the Orient Sun and Moon the manual says to wind backwards then forwards, is that not the same thing. The second hand goes backwards when I do this? Cheers, love the videos.
Hi Marc,i have a question: about 20 days ago,i got my new Tissot T race Swissmatic model T115.407.17.041.00. It has a ETA C15.111 movement and it has no hacking second function..so when i set the time and slightly turned the minutes hand counter clockwise direction the second hand just bounded a little..so that damaged the movement or not? I did that again few days later when the watch was stopped,and the same thing happened again....i never did that again..till now the watch is working perfectly..so my watch is not damaged at all for what i did? I should not do that again? Please give some details,thank you!
Great video! So if I notice that my watch is running a little fast, I now know that it's a bad idea to turn it backwards. What's the best way to get it back on correct time? Leave it sitting crown-up overnight instead of face-up and see if that slows it enough to bring it back on time? Turn it forward 24 hr minus the minute or two that it was ahead? Or do I take it to a watchmaker and get it regulated?
Absolutely phenomenal video! SO informative, Kudos Mark!!! Though… I am too scared to back hack my watch now 😂 Jokes aside it seems that, in theory, back hacking should not cause any problems if it is done with moderation and when the watch is almost completely unwound. Still, I have found out that it doesn’t take much force to go from back hacking to ‘reversing the time’, so I think I will stay away from that habit for some time! 😂 I have to admit though, when I first saw that second hand going backwards on my watch I though ‘wtf, I didn’t know this little thingie is a time machine!’ 😂🤣😂
My SNXJ80 and my 7002 7000 both have back hacking, I had no idea how it was working as everything i read said they did not hack at all!!! I could stop the second hand and make it go backwards lol. Now I understand! Thank you! Kia kaha from New Zealand!
Thank you, Mark, for explaining this. I have often wondered why I can back-hack some of my watches but not others. That's how I set the precise time on my Omega Speedmaster and most of my vintage Omega watches that were built with in house movements. I couldn't understand why my vintage Omega DeVille with ETA 7750 movement won't back-hack, or why some of my watches are much easier to back-hack when the mainspring is only slightly wound. This was very informative!
Fantastic video, very well explained, never heard of back hacking, but I treasure my watches too much to even try this. But thank you for sharing this information.
Thanks for the video. Very informative even though I won't be back hacking my SKX. I'll use a quartz watch if I want an accurate time or just check the time on my CP.
Long Island Watch try and look into colour correcting. It's a very basic editing process that will stop you from looking like a white walker. Big fan of the new camera 👍
Marc made a video on regulation and adjustments. That thingy is related to that. pushing the little notch towards the + makes the watch runs faster and - makes it run slower. It's made to compensate small variations in mass-produced watches. It's really sensitive though.
If you have a fine touch, you can barely hold some slack in the time train against the center friction (cannon) pinion and stop the balance without reversing the train. My 7S26A is fine with this method and I actually prefer a 7S26 for its simplicity. It doesn't do it any harm at all.
It seems like that tiny rubber seal is the only barrier against water coming into the case. That doesn't inspire much confidence. I wonder how does the case of a Rolex Oyster look like and if it has better protection that just one rubber seal.
2 seals another one is in the screw down crown. Its good enough and moisture doesnt actually kill watches that fast in fact a lot of skx s have moisture inside the case and run just fine , you can see it when its freezing , condensation of it .rolex copied 50 phantoms and I believe all watches use the very same design(the way its protected against water crown caseback and crystal) save the russian vostok and maybe couple of others
I tried this on my new Tissot Savonnette with a small seconds hand and it worked. 16 hours later it had gained 7 seconds so I’ll probably do it again an hour before it stops or the next time I set the time
Hey, Marc! After watching this video a question emerged in my head: is it harmful for an automatic movement that IS able to be handwound to be handwound daily? There seems to be quite a discussion regarding this topic in many forums, but i can not find any video in TH-cam concerning this topic. I'd love to hear your explanation. :) P.S. Love your channel, keep up the good work!
As far as I’m aware all modern watches have a clutch that stops them being “overwound” so you could wind it to your hearts content without causing damage to the movement (still wouldnt reccomend it). However if your are winding a vintage mechanical piece you do need to be careful not to snap the main spring by winding it too much, if it isn’t an auto and you want to keep it running daily only give it a few winds
None of you understood my question. I'm quite aware of the clutch mechanism if automatics. I'm taking about the hand winding mechanisms of automatics being more fragile than the ones of pure handwinders.
Just got myself a vintage Constellation and that back-hacking just scared me... 😱😱😱 But 911-Super-Marc came to rescue ! 😅👌😎 Thanks a lot: you saved my day... and maybe my watch too.
This has been a LONG STANDING query of mine (50 YEARS!) - thank you SO MUCH for being the person to finally address it. I didn't even know what it was called until today!! THREE THUMBS UP! (where is that other thumb? I know I had it somewhere!)
Excellent video!!!
I have seen a broken Omega Speedmaster that got the pallet fork stuck because of backhacking.
It ended up getting the pallet fork replaced
Good to know, so that confirms that going backwards is BAD
Another comments states that omega themselves directs users to backhack to set the watch. fail?
There is a big difference between applying just enough pressure when the watch spring is not fully wound to stop the movement, and trying to force the movement backwards!. It is this that damages the watch. Common sense guys. Even Omega know this they just don't take into account how ham fisted people can be. Great vid Mark thank you.
That's interesting. I have a Speedmaster and the manual even recommends backhacking it to get it to synchronize perfectly with other clocks.
@@islandwatch And yet, in the Speedmaster manual, Omega gives instructions how to backhack.
i can't imagine you're wearing the clutch with back hacking. it *slides* when you set time, but when you back hack you transfer torque without sliding. no sliding no rubbing no wear
this video cleared up a lot of detail that mostly people don't talk about. you can describe most of a watch by talking about the going train because that takes you all the way from power to balance wheel, so i was confused about the point of departure between the two trains, the time set mechanism, and of course the clutch. so thanks a bunch
Thanks for putting in the time and effort into making this video. I have been back hacking my 007, Orange Monster and Samurai for years, but I always wondered if it was somehow damaging the movement. You have put my mind at ease. Thank you again.
Thank you . My vintage Bulova runs a little fast. Sometimes I set it back a min . I will stop doing this now .
Thanks for the info, Marc! I back-hack my 7s26 movements, but something instinctively told me to just hold the second hand stationary...not make it run backwards. Liked hearing that confirmed by you.
Thanks David.
It's funny, I asked myself this very question and I think you hit upon the crucial point at around 15'40". I am not a watchmaker, but I am a huge enthusiast and love to think about watch movements. I mentally followed the act of back-hacking and I also feel that it's all about the interaction of the pallet jewels and the escapement. The entry jewel and the exit jewel would essentially be reversing roles. The biggest issue, I think, would be that the jewels would instead of receiving and imparting force on their blunt faces, would instead be raking along the wrong side of each escapement tine, but on the points of the jewels, not the blunt faces. I am right? I'm just an enthusiast, so I would like to hear from an expert.
I have a couple of Seiko 5s with this movement. In fact, they are my "nicest" watches. I don't spend much money on watches, I just have fun bringing old Timexs back to life, Caravelles, etc.
Hi Mark, what makes your videos so great, is your clear way of explaining how a watch works. Thanks a lot!
Great to hear that, thank you.
Thanks Mark for a most interesting and informative video. This so far is my favorite Watch and Learn segment so far. Very well done, thanks again.
Thanks, I really enjoyed this one.
Great video. I discovered this by accident on my new SKX007, which convinced me not to change the stock movement. Love these videos. Please keep 'em going. Thanks
I think you should make a video on the different movements and how they compare to ETA. For example, Selita, STP, Soprod, and ISA. I have been quite impressed with the Selita in my Oris.
Great idea. Personally, I am only familiar with Eta and Selita.
Very cool suggestion. I would also be interested in an explanation of Seiko's various VK meca-quartz models.
That would make for a great Watch and Learn episode. I get confused by the various movements.
Very useful idea.
Definitely, a great idea and Mark is the right person to do the video.
Omega directs Speedmaster users to back hack to set the movement. I feel that qualifies it enough for me.
That's a valid point.
I went through the manual of my new speedy and nowhere does it state that...
@@kevin_howell It's under the instructions for Caliber 1861
Very informative Mark! I've honestly learnt so much from this series of videos, great content as always, keep up the good work Sir... greetings from N.Ireland 👍
Thank you so much, greetings from cold Long Island!
I always wondered why my Timex Expedition North field watch did that. I never knew back hacking was a "thing," but after watching your video I now know it's normal. Thanks for making great YT content!
You are Genius ... Many reviewers talked about it but a seperate video and covering it in watch and learn is a genius ideas...I am sure lot of people will learn from it now
Thanks, I hope so.
Thank you so much for this in-depth breakdown. This puts my mind at ease :)
excellent. you are one of the best teachers. thank you. I retired and I hope this to be a new past time bought some tools also.
Congratulations on your retirement Paul
With my inexpensive Seiko, it is hard to set the desired time (e.g., +15 seconds), because it runs unpredictably for a couple of days. Once it stabilizes, I can no longer stop the seconds hand.
Could be too much torque at that point.
@PacoTaco0404040 I would guess not. The way I understand it, as the mainspring winds up (as it does from wearing it and an automatic won't overwind itself), the watch gets harder to backhack because backhacking involves overcoming the torque of the mainspring. When you backhack, you rotate the movement such that the mainspring rotates in the winding direction (when the movement runs normally, the mainspring is unwinding). So when a watch is fully wound, you may not be able to backhack it because to do so, you need to overcome the spring's torque. With a fully wound spring, that may not be possible.
@PacoTaco0404040 , I really like the watch, but not being able to correct the time (by stopping it for several seconds) is annoying.
I enjoy these learning videos a lot, even though I haven't a clue what you're talking about half the time. Watching these videos, for me, is like looking at the movement in operation through an exhibition caseback. I have no clue what's going on, but it's mesmerizing to view.
hahaha
LOL
Same here!!!
I have same problem, what should I do!? You suggested to open balance wheel & adjusted the lever or what?
Why back hack? Is this the solution to my daily nightmare of adjusting the time on a Seiko skx009? I'll admit that I'm obsessed with starting my day with being no more than one second off. Great lesson, as always Marc.
Thanks for the tutorial, I've been wondering about this. I discovered back-hacking recently when I got my first mechanical watch. I found I could make the seconds hand stop and even move backwards but wondered if it could be harmful to the watch. After a bit of experimentation and after seeing your explanation, I've decided it really isn't worth the trouble and risk. When I go to get a stopped watch going, I just wait for the seconds hand on my reference timepiece to nearly match the position of the seconds hand on the stopped watch. At that point I give it a bit of the "Seiko shake" to get it running. After a bit of practice I can get it moving within a couple of seconds of the reference, and that is certainly good enough. Then I just set the minutes and hours hands to the correct values. No back hacking necessary.
This is why I bought a watch from you Mark, I found out about back-hacking recently and wanted to try it...now I know I shouldn't. Great video, many thanks!
Glad you learned something, thank yo.
Thank you so very much for taking the time to break this down, great episode!
Thanks for taking the time to watch.
@@islandwatch I see what you did there lol.
I NEED SOME HELP OVER HERE!
I was just taking photos of my Seiko 5 Sports (SNZD67K1 - Caliber 7S36A), and i was placing the hands at 10:10 (AM, not PM) and accidentaly i turned the crown backwards to 10:09am or 10:07am and while doing that, first, i noticed the seconds hand going backwards, it never stoped, and then i heard a click which i also felt it in the crown and then the seconds hand started to go clockwise again. That click actually frightened me a bit, i thought a gear got damaged and that the watch wouldn't change the day-&-date by itself, or that the palet fork was broken.
I started to move the hands manually to see if it changed the day-&-date, it did. The seconds hand didn't get stuck, i didn't feel any clicks while doing that, then i placed the hands at 7:50am to change the day-&-date maually, it worked. It was a relief.
Sort of...
Now, after pulling the crown just one click to set the day or the date (not between 9pm and 4am as stated in the user's manual), and then pulling the crown out another click, when i move the crown forward to set up the time, instantly i feel and hear another click, similar to the one described above, but now i just don't know if that's meant to happen or if there's a damaged gear.
This happened arround 40min ago.
Mark, thank you so much for this. I always suspected that going backwards was not a good idea - now I know exactly why! I don't set my watches to the second anyway, but my SKX013 will for sure never get a back hack from me anymore :) Cheers!
Awesome, Thanks TSW!
@@islandwatch I have an old Russian Poljot where to change the date its required to go backwards and forwards between 7 and 12 constantly (the watch only has 1 crown postion). Doing this causes the second hand to go backwards a bit. I wonder how how much effect it has on the movement giving that this is considered the "correct" way to change the date.
Great video Marc. I always wondered how back hacking worked. Like how the sound gets a little louder when you zoom in (3:55). Gives the viewer that "i'm getting closer" feeling.
LOL. Closer to the camera, closer to the microphone.
I found this video quite fascinating, thank you! My first automatic watch was a cheap Orient Mako I got new for about $80. IIRC it has one of the Seiko movements that is not wind-able nor hackable. A few months ago I accidentally discovered it was back-hackable. I had no idea that was a thing until I saw this video, but I was fascinated I could set it exactly with my two other wind-able, hackable Maratac watches. It's cool to understand the how and why, and how amazing the workings of these watches are.
I have the exact same 7s26c movement but mine doesnt hack when i wind backwards
Having used quartz (or just wind-up) watches previously (as in many, many years ago) when I got started with automatics I wanted to set the time EXACTLY to see how accurate the watch is ... And because I wanted the EXACT time. Quartz watches had spoiled me in that regard but of course quartz means batteries so I started using automatics and discovered something. Hacking an automatic is useless. Because any automatic watch I can afford isn't going to be accurate enough for a time hack to have any useful purpose past a few days. Unless I want to hack those automatics every day and in the case of non-hacking movements fiddle around with back hacking them, they're never going to benefit from hacking.
So why does this matter? Because I'm an amateur astronomy buff and I also use my watch for celestial navigation practice. Both of those pursuits require as accurate a time hack as you can get.
So along came Citizen Eco-drives and I got the best of both worlds in a watch. Then along came smart phones (etc.) and now it doesn't really matter because anything with GPS is time synchronized with the GPS satellites exactly in order to work properly.. If I absolutely HAVE to get a +/- one second time hack I just lay my phone on the _____ (bench, table, nav station countertop, etc.) Now I'm free to wear whatever watch suits me at the time no matter what movement it uses. If I have calculated that I need to maintain a tack for an hour and a half any good automatic is accurate enough for that and way, way more convenient than trying to check time on an expensive phone that can slip out of my hands and into Davy Jones' locker in an instant.
I still wear a watch to tell time at a glance and I always will. Pulling out a phone to check the time is just a rude heathen move as far as I'm concerned. I like my watches to be accurate and I virtually NEVER buy a watch for the "bling" factor, though I will choose among my watches to suit the occasion, watches are always first and foremost timepieces as far as I'm concerned -- The purpose of me wearing a watch is to tell time as a primary factor by a large percentage so I like accurate, well made watches. But I'm never going to bother with back-hacking any automatic watch I own ever again.
I love these. It was very helpful not just to learn about back hacking, but also how the gears work to move the hands (which helps to explain why they attach the way they do). Thank you.
You are welcome!
thanks for the insight Marc! have always wondered if this was bad for the movement!
Thanks! Now you sort of know.
Love "W&L" segments. Glad to see you are continuing them.
Funny, it's actually easier and faster to verbally say "Watch and Learn" than "W&L".
Thank you! Faster to type to since I'm a touch typist, except for the shift+number characters.
Interesting. So when the crown is pulled and you don't touch it, all the hands should still be moved by the movement and the crown should be slowly rotating with them. And the added friction could perhaps slow down the movement a bit. I think I'll try this, since my watch is running faster, so every time I need to set the time it's a bit backwards, which I don't want to directly and to revolve everything forwards is a pain..
Thank you for the video! It answered a question I’ve had for quite some time now, and needed an answer from a reputable source. One question, when setting time to the second, what is the best source to use for accurate time?
time.gov
Long Island Watch Thank you!
Mark, I want to thank you! You answered one of my life long questions, and in great details in layman's terms.
Awesome, thank you!
if you really care that much about accuracy that you set your mechanical watch to the second , can i recommend a quartz or radio signal watch for the future . i find my cheapish quartzs usually run for several days before deviating a whole second .
Omega coaxial mechanical movements are certified to within a small fraction of a second per day on the better examples in the accuracy tests. I believe this makes them the most accurate movements in the world regardless of cost especially cals. 8800 / 8900 series. (Seiko Spring Drive is electronically regulated and doesn't count).
@@scdevon : im sure they are great but quartz is also great and costs almost nothing to own or service , long term .
Hi. What if my SKX runs fast so every few days I need to put it back 1 minute? Is it ok to go backwards? Much easier than going forwards 23hrs, 59 minutes. Cheers! Look forward you your reply Mark.
I just recently bought a vintage Omega and have been wondering about this. Thanks for clarifying!
You are welcome!
Hello! Long time listener, first time caller. I just bought a seiko recraft automatic with 7s26 movement but to my knowledge does not back hack or manual wind. Why would there be variance like that within the same movement? Thanks!
I do this a lot with my SKX and have always wondered if I was harming the movement. Thanks for doing this video Marc.
You are welcome.
Great content! Thanks again for continuing to take the time to teach!
You are welcome.
After setting the time on a movement with hacking, how many seconds does it normally take for the movement to get back up to full speed after pushing in the crown?
Great video! Good to see in the video what I have suspected for a while. I am particularly careful with vintage watches to avoid doing anything to compromise the cannon pinion friction fitting as i have had that problem with 1960s gruen precision and seikomatic watches. Thanks!
Thanks for watching.
Will back hacking to much result in the "clutch" loosing friction and being unable to set the time normally?
Probably not. You are only exerting enough counter pressure to break the friction grip between the canon pinion and the arbor. It would take some kind of pressure that expanded the inner canon pinion diameter to cause it to be abnormally affected. Sometimes the canon pinion gets crimped too much during servicing and on replacement is too tight on the arbor and it becomes difficult to change the time without affecting the movement gears adversely. It's a delicate connection.
I would say back-hacking, no. Causing it to run backwards, yes.
If this isn't bad for the movement, would I be right in thinking that means winding the watch minute hand backwards by a few mins to correct the time shouldn't be bad either (since that's basically what back hacking is)? I've got an SKX013 (7S26) and it tends to run fast. So if I want to correct it I should be fine to just wind back by a couple mins, no need to go forwards by 23h and 58mins (and reset the day/date)?
I don't bother! I'm yet to need time within a second or two not many ppl do! Cheers Marc
I know I don't!
Hi, great video. I wonder, how can I set my snk809 accurately without having hacking?
How do you set the time on a watch with quick set date when it’s running fast? Go forward 24hrs then advance the date a full month? Seems a chore just to set the time back every few weeks when you can just reverse the minute hand a few minutes backwards.
What parts do you break if you pull the crown out too vigorously?
Thanks so much for taking the time to address this topic. Wonderful explanation!
You are welcome.
Thanks for explaining that ive always wondered about the parts. Way i see it most 7s26 are +/-20 a day anyway so whats the point i just set mine to whichever minute GMT is at when the watch strikes 12
Right
Excellent video although it bares watching several times at least for me. Is it possible to damage an automatic or manual wind watch turning back the time to set as it's running? Thank you.
I say a bit, like an hour, is ok.
thank you.
If back-hacking is bad, is setting time backwards equally bad? Each movement has its own direction to set the time (a crown rotating direction sets time forward in one movement, would do exactly opposite in another!). I have like 20 watches I rotate through and have not memorized which one is forward direction. Although I never set time backwards, when I start setting it 50% of times I get it wrong direction on first attempt, then I reverse to correct it to set forward. This is the exactly reason why I want to avoid setting time in backwards but I can't, any tips?
I was wondering why the date on my seiko SPRD97 changes before midnight. Is that normal?
What is the name of the black pvd watch you mentioned in the beginning or the video? I thought you said Banneker, but that sure isn't one. Thanks!
Maybe spinnaker?
Always learn something watching Marc’s videos. Thks Marc for sharing.
You are welcome, thanks for taking the time to watch.
Thanks Mark, I appreciate your "public service" lessons to those of us who enjoy watches.
I enjoy making them, thank you.
1:55 when i bought my first mechanical watch SKX007 and i tried to set up the time, and this happend and i tought i fucked up my watch the first day i was so pissed
I love it when you get all technical. Thanks Marc. :-)
LOL, me too.
Yeah Marc, talk dirty to me again... 😏
Very interesting information. Thank you!! BTW difficult to do in vintage watches.
Interesting, thank you.
For non hacking movement I think you need to perfectly align minute hand and forget about the second hand.
The second hand is just a vital sign that the watch is a live and running
Like a heartbeat.
Great simple-easy-to-understand explanation. I'm just wondering if these movements were originally built to back hack? Or was it by pure coincidental luck that it is possible? The fact that you shouldn't back hack when it's fully wound w/too much torque, makes it sound like back hacking was not originally intended. But then car breaks basically work on same principle, but you do have to change the shoes once in a while. Just a thought....
What about shops that keep automatic watches hacked in storage, Is that a bad sign?
What #watch and learn for resetting chronograph video? Please.
So, when you say you should never cause the movement to run backwards, what about setting the watch back a few hours/minutes?
I think briefly is OK.
What I see is: The issue with going backwards is that you will ruin the pallet fork crystals. The pallet fork crystals have a slight angle on them to advance the escapement. If you reverse this action you are applying force to the back of the pallet fork crystal which can either break the pallet fork crystal or grind the ends off the escapement wheel.
Great explanation Marc. I noticed I could can stop the second hand on my (non-hacking) Citizen auto, but didn't know how it worked. Great content and vid.
Thanks!
Will it work on Citizen Promaster with automatic Miyota?
This is a very good video I’m not very knowledgable on watches and this was very interesting and informative to me
Rule of thumb,u can’t turn back time..
No, you cannot.
Cher agrees...
Hermione Granger: Hold my butterbeer
You can if you got a Seiko...
Well, I've heard that you "can" IF you have a Flux Capacitor, a De Lorean and get up to 88 1/2 mph...................! Or was that to "go back in time"? Anyway.
I wonder what abut quartz? Can I adjust a quartz watch backwards?
I have a misaligned hour hand on my Orient Sentry, it points to the right index about 6 minutes past the hour. I didn't check whether it arrived like this, but someone on a forum suggested, that it might be due to this, mainly the seconds hand moving backwards and possibly some gears skipping teeth. Is it possible?
More than likely it was like that from the start.
@@islandwatch Thank you for your answer Marc. I am glad that I haven't broken my watch :)
This is good stuff.Question to you Mark.....When you overcome a friction fit many times you are wearing that pinion to a point the tolerance becomes such that friction is reduced and possibly lost? Am I barking up the wrong tree.I daftly enough have never got my head around how the energy in a mainspring actually converts to the main gearing if that makes sense? Its all incredible engineering frankly! Cheers ,Len.
You are totally correct, and I neglected to mention it. I realized post processing the video I didn't say it, and didn't want to re-shoot.
When I set the day on the Orient Sun and Moon the manual says to wind backwards then forwards, is that not the same thing. The second hand goes backwards when I do this? Cheers, love the videos.
It can, sure.
Hi Marc,i have a question: about 20 days ago,i got my new Tissot T race Swissmatic model T115.407.17.041.00. It has a ETA C15.111 movement and it has no hacking second function..so when i set the time and slightly turned the minutes hand counter clockwise direction the second hand just bounded a little..so that damaged the movement or not? I did that again few days later when the watch was stopped,and the same thing happened again....i never did that again..till now the watch is working perfectly..so my watch is not damaged at all for what i did? I should not do that again? Please give some details,thank you!
I have back hacked my Amphibia a few times to set it. Now I understand what is going on. Great explanation!
Thanks for watching!
Great video! So if I notice that my watch is running a little fast, I now know that it's a bad idea to turn it backwards. What's the best way to get it back on correct time? Leave it sitting crown-up overnight instead of face-up and see if that slows it enough to bring it back on time? Turn it forward 24 hr minus the minute or two that it was ahead? Or do I take it to a watchmaker and get it regulated?
Get it regulated.
@@islandwatch Thanks, Marc. You da man.
Absolutely phenomenal video! SO informative, Kudos Mark!!!
Though… I am too scared to back hack my watch now 😂
Jokes aside it seems that, in theory, back hacking should not cause any problems if it is done with moderation and when the watch is almost completely unwound.
Still, I have found out that it doesn’t take much force to go from back hacking to ‘reversing the time’, so I think I will stay away from that habit for some time! 😂
I have to admit though, when I first saw that second hand going backwards on my watch I though ‘wtf, I didn’t know this little thingie is a time machine!’ 😂🤣😂
My SNXJ80 and my 7002 7000 both have back hacking, I had no idea how it was working as everything i read said they did not hack at all!!! I could stop the second hand and make it go backwards lol. Now I understand! Thank you! Kia kaha from New Zealand!
Thank you for an outstanding explanation and demonstration of backhacking.
Welcome!
Thanks for the excellent explanation! I thought I broke my watch when it went backwards, now I now why it happened.
Yup, not broken!
hello mark. finally a detail video about this particular matter arise. thank you for this video. long awaited video. keep it coming. cheers. :)
How's the weather down there? Had lots of snow today.
Down here, it was all rain. Now all wind and getting CCCCOOOOOLLLLLDDDD.
Thank you for the class!
Very helpfully explained. Thanks.
Thank you, Mark, for explaining this. I have often wondered why I can back-hack some of my watches but not others. That's how I set the precise time on my Omega Speedmaster and most of my vintage Omega watches that were built with in house movements. I couldn't understand why my vintage Omega DeVille with ETA 7750 movement won't back-hack, or why some of my watches are much easier to back-hack when the mainspring is only slightly wound. This was very informative!
Fantastic video, very well explained, never heard of back hacking, but I treasure my watches too much to even try this. But thank you for sharing this information.
Welcome!
Thanks for the video. Very informative even though I won't be back hacking my SKX. I'll use a quartz watch if I want an accurate time or just check the time on my CP.
Me too!
Very informative video again! Thanks Marc.
Did you upgrade your camera? Looks much better now :)
Yup!
Long Island Watch try and look into colour correcting. It's a very basic editing process that will stop you from looking like a white walker.
Big fan of the new camera 👍
Very cool hands-on explaination ! Thanks Marc
Thanks!!!
Awesome. I’ve been waiting for this. Thanks, Marc.
Thanks!
What’s that ‘+’ and ‘-‘ sign near the balance wheel?
Marc made a video on regulation and adjustments. That thingy is related to that. pushing the little notch towards the + makes the watch runs faster and - makes it run slower. It's made to compensate small variations in mass-produced watches. It's really sensitive though.
If you have a fine touch, you can barely hold some slack in the time train against the center friction (cannon) pinion and stop the balance without reversing the train. My 7S26A is fine with this method and I actually prefer a 7S26 for its simplicity. It doesn't do it any harm at all.
It seems like that tiny rubber seal is the only barrier against water coming into the case. That doesn't inspire much confidence. I wonder how does the case of a Rolex Oyster look like and if it has better protection that just one rubber seal.
2 seals another one is in the screw down crown. Its good enough and moisture doesnt actually kill watches that fast in fact a lot of skx s have moisture inside the case and run just fine , you can see it when its freezing , condensation of it .rolex copied 50 phantoms and I believe all watches use the very same design(the way its protected against water crown caseback and crystal) save the russian vostok and maybe couple of others
I tried this on my new Tissot Savonnette with a small seconds hand and it worked. 16 hours later it had gained 7 seconds so I’ll probably do it again an hour before it stops or the next time I set the time
Hey, Marc! After watching this video a question emerged in my head: is it harmful for an automatic movement that IS able to be handwound to be handwound daily? There seems to be quite a discussion regarding this topic in many forums, but i can not find any video in TH-cam concerning this topic. I'd love to hear your explanation. :)
P.S. Love your channel, keep up the good work!
As far as I’m aware all modern watches have a clutch that stops them being “overwound” so you could wind it to your hearts content without causing damage to the movement (still wouldnt reccomend it). However if your are winding a vintage mechanical piece you do need to be careful not to snap the main spring by winding it too much, if it isn’t an auto and you want to keep it running daily only give it a few winds
Automatic watches can release the energy, they can't be "overwound". Handwinders will give you a noticeable resistance which tells you to stop.
None of you understood my question. I'm quite aware of the clutch mechanism if automatics. I'm taking about the hand winding mechanisms of automatics being more fragile than the ones of pure handwinders.
@@lindemann316
Would be news to me.
@@Alias_Anybody There's quite a bit of discussion going on about that in some forums 🙄
Thanks Mark, i did know about back hacking, but seeing is believing here. You explained it well.
Thanks for watching.
Just got myself a vintage Constellation and that back-hacking just scared me... 😱😱😱
But 911-Super-Marc came to rescue ! 😅👌😎
Thanks a lot: you saved my day... and maybe my watch too.
God my name is Marc and I was born on 911. I got a fright there when I read that!!