Exactly right. A good winder like the Wolf you mention won't cause any harm to any automatic watches.I like the Wolf Design 2.7 winders, as they are highly configurable, allowing you to set the number of turns per day, whether it rotates clockwise, counterclockwise, or bidirectionally, and it also features a delayed start timer.
I think the delayed start is particularly helpful, as when I put a watch I have worn the entire day on the winder it probably already has close to its full power reserve, so it makes sense to give it a bit of time to wind down before trying to wind it up again.Exactly right. A good winder like the Wolf you mention won't cause any harm to any automatic watches.
I understand, but while the winder should be set to wind the mainspring as much as it unwinds over a 24 hour period, this is usually not true over a shorter period of time, since winders tend to front load the winding in the first half of the 24 hour period, as opposed to evenly spreading it out throughout the 24 hour period. So, if you start the wind immediately on a watch with a full power reserve, you will just end up wearing out the clutch prematurely, and after the 24 hour cycle is over, you'll have less than a full power reserve (since it could not add to the power reserve beyond the maximum at the very start).That's a good thing, but remember, a good winder doesn't wind a watch, it simply maintains its position from the moment you place it in the winder. For example, if you place a half wound watch on a good winder, then remove the watch two days later, it will still be half wound. No more, no less.
Which part are you taking issue with? If the TPD is properly set, then it should wind the watch as much as it unwinds over a 24 hour period. If you start the wind cycle when the watch is fully wound, then it won't wind it further. Also the winder when on tends to wind the watch faster than it unwinds, so if you place a fully wound watch on a winder that starts its cycle immediately, then at the end of the 24 hour period, it will have a bit less or much less than a full wind, depending on how the winding is distributed over the 24 hour cycle.I'm not sure this is quite accurate, but regardless, don't put a fully wound watch on a winder and you should be fine forevermore.
------It's no different to wearing a watch everyday. The watch movement working everyday is preferable to it stopping, according to watch experts I've spoken to (with masters degrees in watchmaking). I'll take their word for it.