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Posted

Could one of you fine people explain this terminology to me ? I see it around the place as i spend hours deciding what next to buy and i have no idea of its relevance.

Thanks !!

JD

Posted

Hacking = Seconds hand stops when crown is fully pulled out in order to set up time.

No hacking = Lack of the above function.

Most of the automatic watches have hacking mechanism.

Guest HaloArchive
Posted

It means that the one that is hacking, when put near a computer, will hack it and give it a virus and, vice-versa for non-hacking. Jay-Kay. Hacking means the seconds stop when time-set is engaged and vice-versa for non-hacking.

Posted

Unless you are out to replicate a vintage down to this level, SuperRep, don't worry about it.

It is not even tell-- unless you are setting the time, of say a vintage Rolex rep, in public, in front of a Rolex EXPERT as an example.

Here on these forums, it is more of a "vintage" movement thing. (i.e. OLD Submariners up until about ~1974~ were NON-hacking.)

The most common movements found in our Reps: ETA 2836, 2824, 7750, 6497, Asian 21Js are hacking.

Surprisingly, most (modern) Seiko divers are still NON-hacking, the 7S25, 7S26 work horse movements.

Posted

Unless you are out to replicate a vintage down to this level, SuperRep, don't worry about it.

It is not even tell-- unless you are setting the time, of say a vintage Rolex rep, in public, in front of a Rolex EXPERT as an example.

Here on these forums, it is more of a "vintage" movement thing. (i.e. OLD Submariners up until about ~1974~ were NON-hacking.)

The most common movements found in our Reps: ETA 2836, 2824, 7750, 6497, Asian 21Js are hacking.

Surprisingly, most (modern) Seiko divers are still NON-hacking, the 7S25, 7S26 work horse movements.

I disabled the hack on my vintage project Sub :)

Not for accuracy to gen, of course, but because the movement kept stopping under impacts, so I figured the easiest thing to do was to bend the hack lever away from the balance wheel so it just wouldn't touch it at all :lol: Problem solved, and, as an added bonus, the movement is now more historically accurate :lol:

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