projectologist Posted September 30, 2009 Report Posted September 30, 2009 the famous radium girls come in mind i had to remove all my watches with radium dials from the house after i read about them .... but im a pussy The Radium Girls ingested the Radium by licking the points on their lume application brushes, totally unrelated to wearing a Radium dialed watch. Here's the bottom line... Radium is comprised of a number of isotopes - including 223, 224 & 226 - all of which are present, in various quantities, in any 'lump' of the substance. These isotopes are hazardous, but only at very short distances. They do emit highly energetic charged particles (Alpha & Beta), but these particles do not travel very far at all... they will not penetrate the skin from an external source, for example. So wearing a radium lumed watch is no problem whatsoever - the 'dangerous' particles (aka 'radiation') will not make it through the glass or metal of the watch, let alone into your skin.
bwhitesox Posted September 30, 2009 Report Posted September 30, 2009 I would be more worried about my money leaking from my bank account from these watches. LOL
dluddy Posted September 30, 2009 Report Posted September 30, 2009 I would be more worried about my money leaking from my bank account from these watches. LOL you got that right D
kent2 Posted September 30, 2009 Report Posted September 30, 2009 i had some emails with the other one doing this thing and in the end did not commit. i guess from your post earlier in the month that was lucky for me. count me in. i wonder if it is too long before a chinese source floods the market with this quality case... i wonder if it would be possible to get a data package of the watch. one must exist but would some one be willing to sell it and presumably many copies of it vice a lot fewer of the cases. ps hands ? type ? is there not something about to come to the forum in the new year on good hands... nice nice work
ubiquitous Posted September 30, 2009 Report Posted September 30, 2009 I believe this guy is able to fabricate hands if I'm not mistaken...
Watchmeister Posted September 30, 2009 Author Report Posted September 30, 2009 This is not CAD CNC so I don't think we will be seeing them coming from the Chinese or anyone else. The other projects will be beautiful as well but done on CAD assisted CNC machines and with 316L steel. I do hope to eventually get mine and be able to compare. On the hands on this watch they are being made along with a dial so I will post those pics when I receive them.
Clint Eastwood Posted October 1, 2009 Report Posted October 1, 2009 Very nice case, i realy want one but at this time it' too expensicve for me to buy, but i understand price are high as the quality are here. New plate for 240 will interest me a lot. is this design a copyright by PAM??? I don't know but before be know as a pam design it will be a rolex design, and more commonly a design of watches of 30's. The locking CG on 6152/1 is patented, but only the case deign of 3646 models i don't think; the new screwed lugs of today radiomir case are patented.
Star69 Posted October 1, 2009 Report Posted October 1, 2009 so this is not the same project that VDB announced @Repgeek ? this was CNC glory - hence a little overpriced imho cheers, Frank
t Posted October 2, 2009 Report Posted October 2, 2009 T - I don't think the design is copyright. The 6152 etc. were covered by a Patent (which has now expired), but Panerai have protected the crown guard with a trademark. However, the cushion case isn't unique to Panerai and hence can't be trademarked (and any original patents would have expired before 1960) - meaning you're free to reproduce them (without the Brevet engraving on the crown). hmmmm... i think it would be easier to produce 100 of this case for a price range of $500... SUG (SINN) made very nice qulity watch case ... or Fricker in Pforzheim could do it. Let me think about. I am also working on a non-alarm bridge for Angelus 240. The master watchmaker from "Glash
Watchmeister Posted October 2, 2009 Author Report Posted October 2, 2009 I am also working on a non-alarm bridge for Angelus 240. The master watchmaker from "Glash
t Posted October 2, 2009 Report Posted October 2, 2009 2 different plates, 3 different cotes de geneve i don
Neuuubeh Posted October 2, 2009 Report Posted October 2, 2009 (edited) The Radium Girls ingested the Radium by licking the points on their lume application brushes, totally unrelated to wearing a Radium dialed watch. I believe I also read somewhere how they used to paint their WHOLE bodies and scare their boyfriends in the dark and stuff... Quite tragical, knowing that the "bosses" knew about the dangers.. Personally I cant imagine even keeping such a watch at home tho, thinking of ionizing radiation makes me uneasy... That case does look nice tho, I gotta admit.. Keep us posted please! Edited October 2, 2009 by Neuuubeh
ravishingrick Posted October 3, 2009 Report Posted October 3, 2009 (edited) The Radium Girls ingested the Radium by licking the points on their lume application brushes, totally unrelated to wearing a Radium dialed watch. Here's the bottom line... Radium is comprised of a number of isotopes - including 223, 224 & 226 - all of which are present, in various quantities, in any 'lump' of the substance. These isotopes are hazardous, but only at very short distances. They do emit highly energetic charged particles (Alpha & Beta), but these particles do not travel very far at all... they will not penetrate the skin from an external source, for example. So wearing a radium lumed watch is no problem whatsoever - the 'dangerous' particles (aka 'radiation') will not make it through the glass or metal of the watch, let alone into your skin. Here is to your theory M8! Uncased Radium dial and hands: Cased Radium dial and hands: Edited October 3, 2009 by ravishingrick
Watchmeister Posted October 3, 2009 Author Report Posted October 3, 2009 2 different plates, 3 different cotes de geneve i don
rmcsherry Posted October 5, 2009 Report Posted October 5, 2009 Don't forget the all important intermediate winding wheel - whilst thinking about this project on the weekend, I noticed this wheel is completely custom to the non-alarm Angelus and would also need to be replicated for an accurate non-alarm (the alarm wheel is too big, and no other gears on an Angelus are the same dimensions )
t Posted October 5, 2009 Report Posted October 5, 2009 (edited) intermediate wheel is different? please explain? i would not copy the non-alarm bridge... because this is different and would not fit 1:1 on the alarm movement i would copy the alarm bridge but in design of the non-alarm without holes for the alarm function Edited October 5, 2009 by t
0808 Posted October 5, 2009 Report Posted October 5, 2009 what was the material used for the gen case? was it the stay brite or anything else? if it is the stay brite then this would really be a true 1:1 project
earlgrey-erfurt Posted October 6, 2009 Report Posted October 6, 2009 As i know panerai used steel not Staybrite Alloy so there will be a significant difference in wight but the case looks good helmut
Watchmeister Posted October 7, 2009 Author Report Posted October 7, 2009 I have a 3646 case in 316L from Watchmaster and StayBrite on this case and the weight is very very close. Staybrite was used by all Swiss watchmakers for decades (20's through the 60's)for their better watches. The 300 series steels did not come until the 60's and 70's and it improved the resistance to corrosion but it does have a somewhat different - especially when aged. In truth StayBrite was simply a brand name for Stainless Steel (Inox for those of you in the EU). As you can see from a couple of articles below StayBrite was used by everyone including Patek, Vacheron and Rolex. Rolex is the manufacturer of 3646 cases so I have always assumed it is Staybrite. It could be another brand but the metallurgy (metal composition) will be accurate to the time period. Here are a couple of interesting articles. http://www.sswnews.com/dyknow/ShowPage.aspx?pageId=806 http://www.hautehorlogerie.org/IMG/pdf/MetallurgicalEvolutionStaybrite.pdf So I can't say definitively that the 3646 used StayBrite but I do know that Rolex used it during the period and that all the 300 and 900 series steels came decades later.
messenius Posted October 7, 2009 Report Posted October 7, 2009 This makes the project sound even more interesting. Thanks for posting these links I have a 3646 case in 316L from Watchmaster and StayBrite on this case and the weight is very very close. Staybrite was used by all Swiss watchmakers for decades (20's through the 60's)for their better watches. The 300 series steels did not come until the 60's and 70's and it improved the resistance to corrosion but it does have a somewhat different - especially when aged. In truth StayBrite was simply a brand name for Stainless Steel (Inox for those of you in the EU). As you can see from a couple of articles below StayBrite was used by everyone including Patek, Vacheron and Rolex. Rolex is the manufacturer of 3646 cases so I have always assumed it is Staybrite. It could be another brand but the metallurgy (metal composition) will be accurate to the time period. Here are a couple of interesting articles. http://www.sswnews.com/dyknow/ShowPage.aspx?pageId=806 http://www.hautehorlogerie.org/IMG/pdf/MetallurgicalEvolutionStaybrite.pdf So I can't say definitively that the 3646 used StayBrite but I do know that Rolex used it during the period and that all the 300 and 900 series steels came decades later.
projectologist Posted October 7, 2009 Report Posted October 7, 2009 Please note that the original 3646 cases were made by a machining process using a series of cams to guide the lathes and mills (for both consistency and speed)... which was the precursor to CNC machining. They were not made individually by hand per se, only perhaps fine-tuning with finishing files and polishing wheels was the only time "hand-made" came into play.
earlgrey-erfurt Posted October 7, 2009 Report Posted October 7, 2009 (edited) maybe a lack of translation and english language knowledge if its of Staybrite Steel than its cool, and i send respect to the hard work... i found some info on Staybrite Alloy, so this Alloy is wrong but an easy to shape material „The Metallurgical Evolution of Staybrite Alloys for Watch Case Applications" http://www.hempel-metals.com/UserFiles/File/The%20Metallurgical%20Evolution%20of%20Staybrite.pdf?PHPSESSID=2b643c7f7ee09f35a8ef7be9f3ccac8a Helmut Edited October 7, 2009 by earlgrey-erfurt
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