Pin Pusher Kit with 5 Tips...
Pin pusher kit with five interchangeable tips, the workshop solution for adjusting any metal watch bracelet to wrist size.
Manual pin pusher for watch bracelets, supplied with interchangeable tips of varying diameter to suit any link pin.
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The Punch pin for watch – Manual pin pusher, variable diameter is a manual punch pin used by watchmakers to drive out the pins that hold a metal bracelet together. It is built from stainless steel construction with a knurled handle and a fine point, available in four diameters of 0.70, 0.80, 0.90 and 1 mm and is used for extracting the small straight pins that lock the links of a steel bracelet, in order to shorten or repair it. This watchmaker tool suits any metal watch bracelet that uses straight friction pins rather than spring bars between links; not used for screwed links or for spring bar removal at the lugs, so it slips naturally into the routine of anyone who services watches, hobbyist or professional alike.
If you have ever struggled with a slipping screwdriver, a stubborn case-back or a crown that refused to grip, you already know why a properly sized, well-built watchmaker tool matters more than its modest price. Around the workshop bench this kind of accessory pays for itself the very first time it spares a marred case or a chewed-up screw head.
Look closely and you see a tool that has been thought through. The working surface – be it a blade, a jaw, a tip or a lens – is shaped for the exact job it has to do, and nothing else. Materials are chosen for the right balance of hardness and ductility, and dimensions are tuned to fit the typical hand and the typical wristwatch. Stainless steel construction with a knurled handle and a fine point, available in four diameters of 0.70, 0.80, 0.90 and 1 mm: that combination means the tool can be picked up, used and put down dozens of times in a row without fatigue.
The intent is to keep your attention on the watch rather than on the tool itself. A precision accessory should disappear in the hand and let the case, the movement, the metal bracelet stay the focus of the work. That is the design philosophy you will recognise as soon as you take the first few measurements or open the first case-back.
You will reach for this watchmaker tool whenever you need extracting the small straight pins that lock the links of a steel bracelet, in order to shorten or repair it. In practical terms that means any metal watch bracelet that uses straight friction pins rather than spring bars between links; not used for screwed links or for spring bar removal at the lugs. Even seasoned collectors sometimes underestimate how much smoother a job becomes when the dedicated tool is on the bench, rather than an improvised substitute borrowed from a kitchen drawer.
Using the right watchmaker tool also protects the value of the watch. Vintage cases are particularly sensitive: a single deep scratch on a brushed lug or a chewed slot on a stainless screw head can knock down the resale value far more than the cost of buying the correct accessory in the first place.
The handling routine is simple, but doing it well makes the difference between a clean job and a regret. Follow these steps:
Take it slow on the first few attempts. With a relaxed grip and a steady wrist, the gesture quickly becomes natural. Most beginners gain confidence after three or four real-world repairs and never look back.
The watchmaker tool is forged or machined and then ground to size. Surfaces are smoothed enough to avoid leaving marks on the watch but textured where a non-slip grip is required, so the tool behaves predictably even with slightly damp fingers.
To keep the watchmaker tool in form for years, give it three small kindnesses: wipe it clean after use, store it in a dry place, and never use it for jobs it was not designed for. A precision accessory pressed into duty as a chisel or a screwdriver loses its edge quickly. Treated well, it can comfortably outlast the watch on your wrist.
Is this tool suitable for beginners in watchmaking?
Yes, this is one of the more approachable watchmaker tools. The technique is intuitive and, with a soft bench cushion and a steady hand, the risk of damaging the case, the crystal or the gasket stays low.
Which kinds of watches does it work with?
It works on most steel and titanium bracelets with straight pins. For spring bars at the lugs use a spring bar tool; for screwed links use a precision screwdriver.
How should I clean and store the tool?
Wipe the tool dry after each use, especially after contact with cleaning fluids or silicone gasket grease. Store it in a dry drawer or a roll-up pouch; a very thin film of light machine oil protects the steel parts in humid workshops.
Browse our full range of watchmaker tools to complete your repair kit and keep every favourite watch ticking for years to come.