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Everything posted by sneed12
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Thanks! Means a lot coming from you. The case shaping looks really, really good. No way. Look how even and consistent RA got the CGs. The points on each side are the same size, same angle... no way I could get it looking that good by hand. Finishing and shaping are two very different things.
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15 seconds per day is pretty damn impressive for a non-COSC watch movement. The fact that you returned it for 15 sec/day boggles my mind. I'm shocked that the dealer accepted the return to be honest.
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built a 1675 a while ago (http://www.rwgforum.net/topic/147952-cartel-1675-converted-to-low-beat/) but sold it when I needed some cash last winter. Since then I've had an itch for another, so I started the build process again a few months ago. Begins with a stock cartel 1675: This rep has some great parts, but also some pretty bad flaws from the factory. Most of them have been discussed before. The biggest ones, to me, are the caseback, bezel, and case shape. This rep is built on the same case that 1680/5513 reps come from. The case has too much meat on it, especially under the CGs The first thing I want to do is have the case reshaped. RolexAddict at RWG is well-known for his work reshaping cases, so I strip the watch down and send the midcase off to France. Next, I dig in the parts box until I find a caseback that is the correct shape. The only one I find that fits this case is from a 21j Daytona rep (incorrect 1680 "bubble" caseback on the right) but some quick work with some sandpaper cleans off the engraving Now time to change the bezel. The rep comes with this bezel from the factory The shape is correct for a 1680 but all wrong for a 1675. I order a Clark's bezel with the correct profile the only annoying thing about it is that the whole thing comes bead blasted. It should have polished sides. I'll polish it later. Time to swap out the clone ETA movement for a slow beat Swiss 2846 Need to take the GMT bits off the clone movement and put them on the Swiss and then it's time to wait for the case to come back from RolexAddict. Three weeks later, it's back. Here's the CG shape before and after The overall shaping of the CGs and is fantastic, but honestly I wasn't too happy with the finishing. As you can see from the pic, the polished surfaces look a bit wavy and there are still scratches and tool marks evident in the surface. The other side of the case looks the same way So, I get out the polishing stuff and set about re-finishing the polished case surfaces. I go all the way back down to 320 grit: on both sides and on the flat top part of the CGs Up through 400, 600 grit 800 grit I just cut a little piece of each successive grit, so it doesn't take much sandpaper to do a whole case and by the time I get through 1000, 1500, 2000 grit it's getting pretty shiny Hit it with the Dremel and some green jeweler's rouge for that mirror finish and we're done. Polished the bezel ring at the same time. Forgot to take a pic at this stage, but this is what the completed finish on the case and bezel ring looks like but I'm jumping ahead. Movement installed Clark's T116 crystal fitted and the first use of my new press that I won in the tutorial contest (thanks, Offshore!). Amazing how much nicer it is to work with a proper press. I decided to throw it on a jubilee for now and keep the rivet bracelet in reserve in case I get bored. Here's the completed watch Very happy with the way it came out. Considered aging the bezel insert, but honestly now that it's all shiny and new-looking maybe I'll leave it the way it is for a while.
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Running dial up (or down) but not vice versa is not an uncommon failure mode for movements of all types. It's not just a sec@6 thing. A sec@6 Daytona is NOT the recommended movement to start on, BTW. It's about as complicated as you can get. It's like starting with brain surgery.
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I've had mine about 2 years now, it's running strong. I hack it when not wearing it though.
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I've seen a fair number of WTB posts for either dead A7750s or dead sec @ 6 movements, you can probably sell it as is even if it doesn't run. At minimum you need some good screwdrivers, good tweezers, a good set of hand pullers and some hand setters. You cannot do anything without touching the hands and dial. He's going to have the transfer plate stuff on top of the movement to deal with, and no calendar plate.
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Noob Explorer II 16570...what needs to be done...
sneed12 replied to docthor's topic in The Rolex Area
What's wrong with the crystal? It looks fine. The CGs need work and you need a new dial. I've dropped gen dials into these cases a few times (have another one in the parts box waiting for the right donor case, in fact). -
Think it through: if you have no money, why would they bother suing you? They're fishing, that's all.
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No worries, we all have lazy days
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The ETA 2836 (and clones) and Miyota 8215 (and clones) haven't changed at all in going on 5 decades now. The basics of hand size, dial feet position, etc are still the same. Do a search, understand the information, and you'll get why thinking the answer might have changed doesn't make sense.
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Noob factory Ceramic PO and LM LE. (LM due for Release.)
sneed12 replied to cougar1's topic in The Omega Area
I want that rubber strap for my old orange PO. -
"quartz"
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I think that after a small mod the IWC Mark XVI is a true "Super Rep"
sneed12 replied to dutchguy2's topic in The IWC Area
Too big in which dimension? Too thick? I've trimmed crowns and He valves successfully before using the poor man's lathe... -
This question has been asked dozens, maybe hundreds of times. Do a search.
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Noob Explorer II 16570...what needs to be done...
sneed12 replied to docthor's topic in The Rolex Area
They're not black, they're gunmetal grey. This was always wrong on this generation of noob Explorer II. -
The more it bounces around inside the watch, the more it will scratch up your dial. I'd be reluctant to ship it if I were you, at least not before you open it up and get that marker out of there.
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Attention New York City Noobs-local rep repair
sneed12 replied to MLinNYinHD's topic in General Discussion
And he seems really offended that I pointed out it seems a bit shady... -
You've searched everywhere, eh? This place is dead, eh? Sorry to inform you, but this forum doesn't exist just to answer your questions when you demand an answer. No one here is your personal watch encyclopedia. Whining about how no one has given you what you demand isn't going to get you answers any faster. Sometimes I ask a question and no one answers and I can't find he information. You know what I do then? I give it a try and report back what I find. That's called giving back to the community. Without someone being willing to do that, how would this community know the answer to your question? Why don't you try the swap yourself? Rant over. in any case, the information you are looking for is out there--you must not have looked very hard. The Noob/parnis ceramic bezel can be made to work on a BP sub, but the BP bezel insert will not fit a noob case.
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Noob Explorer II 16570...what needs to be done...
sneed12 replied to docthor's topic in The Rolex Area
No, the outside shape is fine and the length is fine. They need to be trimmed on the inside to show the crown. -
http://www.rwgforum.net/topic/157609-116619-blue-ceramic-sub-built-on-bp-case/ I built a blue Sub-C on a BP case a while ago, but to be honest I wasn't super happy with it. It had a gen crystal in it originally, but I pulled the gen crystal to put in my GMT IIc and I wasn't super happy with the BP crystal. Also, the lume on the dial and hands was green, not blue. So I decided to pull the whole thing apart and start over. I started with a Noob Sub-C dial this time: and decided to pull the markers off and transplant markers from a BP dial. They fit exactly, so anyone who wants to use the black Noob Sub-C dial with the BP markers to fix the OFFICIALLYCERTIFIED problem can do so. You have to take the glue off the back of the dial with acetone and then pop the markers off They're quite decent actually, so I'll save them for another project I wanted to compare the BP lume to the Noob lume (BP marker is the one on the dial already) As you can see, the lume on both is pretty good--way better than "rep lume" used to be. The Noob lume has too much purple in it, the color of the gen lume is more like the bluish green of the BP markers. So I put some more markers on and take another lume shot for fun Finally finished with the dial and glue the markers from the back. While I'm waiting for the glue to dry, I decide to try and fit a WM9 crown. The coronet on the BP crown is the old-style 702/early 703, and wrong for this watch. It turns out that the BP crown has the same threads as the gen/WM9 crown, but hole in the rep tube isn't wide enough to accept the gen crown. I wonder if I can just drill it out a bit to accept the gen crown, and it turns out the answer is no: Tube snapped right at the joint with the case. No big deal, grab an easy-out and get what's left of the tube and grab a Clark's 7030 tube. Which, of course, doesn't fit. So, I start drilling out the case and countersinking the hole and finally get the WM9 crown installed. Getting the Clark tube installed was a gigantic pain in the ass. Honestly, I don't think I'd do it again. It took a LOT of drilling to get the case to accept a gen-style tube, and you always run the risk of something like a broken tap. Next time I'll just deal or find a better rep crown. Anyway, glue on the dial is dry so I grab a fresh ETA 2836-2 with BK DWO snap a pic with the painted ceramic bezel insert, just for grins (glad I did, because that bezel insert breaks in about 20 minutes) Now I'm ready to assemble, or so I think except it turns out the Noob dial doesn't fit the BP case--there's a step just under the rehaut. You can see that the dial doesn't quite touch the bottom of the rehaut here. Like a moron, I didn't check the fit back at the beginning, which would have been the right time to do it. So the movement gets uncased, hands come off, and I trim the dial down. I've found that the best way is to install it on a Dremel like so and apply sandpaper to the edge while it's spinning. This keeps it round and it goes quite quickly. Lots of painter's tape to make sure it doesn't get scratched. Reinstall dial and hands as you can see, there was plenty of room outside the tick marks to trim. BigCrown crystal and insane bezel spring stuff installed: Bezel on and cleaned of old glue. The BP bezel is a giant pain in the ass to install, as far as I'm concerned. The BigCrown crystal is pretty decent, but the AR on the crystal is far too blue. The reason I decided to use a BigCrown with this watch is that I figured the blue might not be too noticeable against the blue dial and blue insert. I think I can live with it. Here's how it looks with the insert on but I noticed that the bezel wasn't on quite right, and did something monumentally stupid and just pressed on it with my thumb. The bezel retaining ring pushed on the back of the insert and snapped it in two places. It's being glued back together now and I'll take a look at it in the morning, but I'm probably going to need a new insert. Oh well. On the bright side, maybe the bezel paint will come out better on top of flat factory paint. Fast forward three weeks: Got the new bezel insert in the mail the other day. Here's a pic of the unmodded factory insert (bottom) compared to the broken, painted one (top) Another pic, different angle Look at how different the color of the "30" is compared to the color of the "50" due to the angle of the light. The unmodded bezel doesn't have this effect. Brianmds recently shared his opinion that my painted bezels look like crap, and it's true that my paint isn't as flat as a professional factory paint job could be, but I think this color changing effect is far more noticeable than a tiny bit of roughness in the paint that isn't visible except in macro pictures. So, I paint my new bezel and except for some cleanup, my watch is finally complete. The black hole effect on the BigCrown crystal is quite good, actually, just as good as a gen. The only problem with the BigCrown crystal is that the AR is far too blue, but (as I hoped) the blue of the AR isn't really noticeable against the blue dial. I have my gen crystal in my GMT IIc and the BigCrown in this one.
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The glidelock failure is unacceptable. The fact that the bezel insert is misaligned a bit is pretty run-of-the-mill for reps, to be honest. What do you expect for $138?
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Not quite true, the last GMT Master (the 16700) had the hour hand on the bottom even though the hour hand was not independently settable.