it's a watch with a mechanical movement that is kept wound by the movement of the wearer's wrist as opposed to a quartz watch that needs a battery to work.
An automatic watch winder is a watch that automatically winds itself to have power by the movement of your arm. When your arm moves the watch automatically winds itself giving it power so it does not need to run on a battery.
A quartz movement is the common watch movement, with the repeating starting and stopping action. An automatic movement represents a higher standard of mechanical engineering.
No, it is a manually wound or automatic (kenetic) movement.
Typically, "Chronograph" does not describe the movement of a watch, but rather the "complication" of a watch's movement. A watch's complication is anything that provides advanced functionality, such as moon-phase display or perpetual calendar. In this case, "Chronograph" refers to a watch that is capable of stopwatch functionality in addition to timekeeping. Usually this is built into three separate dials for hours, minutes, and seconds. Such a watch can have any movement type (automatic, quartz), and can also have several complications at once. Note that digital watches with stopwatch functionality are considered "digital chronographs", and there is also the "analog-digital chronograph". Some online retailers confuse complications with the actual movement (putting "chronograph" for the movement), so further research should be done to determine whether the watch actually uses quartz or automatic movement.
An automatic watch winder is a device that rotates an automatic watch to keep it fully wound when it is not being worn. It mimics the natural motion of the wearer's wrist, preventing the watch from stopping due to lack of movement. The winder operates on a timer to rotate the watch intermittently, typically in both clockwise and counterclockwise directions.
Yes, prolonged exposure to X-rays can potentially damage the delicate components of an automatic watch, potentially disrupting its movement or accuracy. It is advisable to avoid exposing automatic watches to X-rays whenever possible.
An automatic is a completely mechanical watch, the wearer's movement winds the spring in the watch which then powers the watch, whereas a kinetic uses the movement to add charge to a battery contained within the quartz movement of the watch. Both systems essentially use movements transfered to power the watch through weights which move in the watch. A kinetic watch is likely to be more accurate than an automatic as it uses a quartz movement, although many modern automatic movements are very accurate to +/- 10 seconds per 24hrs or less. If you do not use an automatic watch for more than 36-48 hrs the movement will usually have stopped as the energy contained within the spring is likely to have been drained over this point, and will then need to be worn / given a gentle shake to get the watch moving again, so you would have to reset the time / date at this point. Some automatic watches now show how much 'power' they have remaining on their face. An automatic watch is likely to require more regular servicing than a kinetic or quartz watch as there are more moving parts.
A watch's mechanism that is powered by a manual activity such as being wound up by hand or by the movement of the watch. Automatic watches require constant wearing or they need to be placed in a watch winder box to maintain the winding and settings of the automatic watch. A watch winder allows you to own more than one automatic watch and not have to worry about resetting the time on any of them. Manual watches you need to wind, automatic watches wind themselves. http://www.thewatchery.com
A Seiko automatic watch relies on the motion of the wearer's wrist to wind the mainspring and power the watch, while a Seiko kinetic watch generates electricity using a spinning rotor powered by the wearer's movement. Kinetic watches typically have a rechargeable battery to store the generated energy, while automatic watches do not require a battery.
It is an automatic watch movement manufactured by ETA SA, a subsidiary of the Swatch Group, the giant Swiss watchmaker. The 2836-2 has a day-date function added on the 3 o'clock position. Being automatic, the watch has no battery, and self-winding by the movement of your wrist. It has about 40hrs power reserve under full wind. The 2836-2 is also adopted by famous watch brands such as TAG Heuer and Oris.
A timepiece like this Invicta men's diving watch advertised as "21 jewel movement" automatic means that the workings of the watch are jewels, which are harder and won't wear down like metal gears. Jeweled movements were used before quartz and digital watch technology.