1. In this case the substrate is hard enough to support the coating which is applied by CVD and will be between 10-20 microns thick
2. This isn't DLC, this is polycrstalline diamond, totally different material. This stuff is 10k vickers hardness
No, sapphlex is sapphire bonded onto a glass crystal. Sapphlex is a scratch resistant as sapphire but has the advantage of being tougher, it s used on divers watches a lot. These crystals go one better by bonding polycrystalline diamond onto the glass.
http://www.longislandwatch.com/Thunderbird...s_Watches-1.htm
These are an offshoot brand of a German company. The glass is has a CVD deposited layer of diamond on. It's funny that they more expensive models still use sapphire because that is what people expect, despite the fact that a diamond coated crystal has the advantage of being harder to scratch and tougher than a sapphire.
no as they are aluminium they cannot be given a PVD coating. There are black anodised iphone backs though...
http://cgi.ebay.com/Black-Metal-Back-Cover...id=p3286.c0.m14
I have a mixed lot of 50 of these to sell (15 black, the rest gold). Sales includes units and install kits to go with them. I sell them on the site darthpod.com for $60 a unit. I find myself in need of some quick cash hence the sale of these units.
http://img387.imageshack.us/my.php?i...img2108hp1.jpg
I am looking for $800 delivered for the lot.
I've been experimenting with lost wax casting of silver and gold. I'm thinking of making some watches cases, nothing too chunky like a submariner, more like dress watches that use leather straps . Anyone have suggestions for a suitable watch?
AR should be on the interior of the glass only. Exterior AR can scratch quite easily. Seems stupid to have a sapphire crystal with easily scratched coating on it.
I do wonder what percentage of fakes sold as gens never get found out. I've seen more than a few where the unsuspecting buyer has left good feedback, despite having been ripped off. I suppose the first time many of the buyers find out is when they stroll into an authorised dealer beaming with pride, only to be told they dropped $5k on a chinese lemon.
looks like it could be acrylic, the problem being that it will be even less durable than the traditional anodised aluminium bezel. It should be pretty easy to confirm if it is ceramic or not by tapping the surface with something metal.
Someone has said it is plastic, which if true is going to cause problems for people very quickly, as the plastic will look like crap once it gets a swirls of hairline scratches on it. My understanding was that it was alumina or zirconium ceramic bonded to a metal base. Has anyone been able to determine one way or the other?