Jump to content
When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
  • Current Donation Goals

is it possible to remove the cyclops off plexy crystals


Recommended Posts

Posted

I've done so before while experimenting on aftermarket crystals...

IMG_3576.jpg

IMG_3579.jpg

IMG_3580.jpg

But for gen, you may be better off just going with a proper Tropic over Cyclope. e.g. if you are swapping a 1680 25-127, you can use the 25-19 for the no-cyclops look.

Posted

Happy with using heat to loosen the glue on a sapphire but is it possible on a plexy?

It is possible, but not with heat. You have to grind it off and re polish the crystal.

Posted

I was just thinking about the plexy on your tudor to be honest as the gen is apparently hard to get would it be possible to reposition the loupe, do you use heat to loosen the glue and then re-glue with UV glue?

Posted

I removed the cyclops from Datejust plexy.

I sanded out the Cyclops,

then I polished the area with different fine grade sanding paper and finished with Xerapol .

Posted

I always thought the plexi cyclope was molded into it. I would use a fine flat file to take off most of it then use progressively finer wet/dry paper on a firm rubber sanding block followed by polishing compound. You really don't need to go much finer than 600 or 800 but it needs to be worked down evenly on the rubber block to avoid optical distortions...

Posted

"Destructive" sounds so barbaric, using the "aggressive stock removal method" sounds much more civilized! :rofl:

Posted

I mounted an empty case (no movement or caseback) in a lathe and cut the magnifier off an aftmkt 127 crystal and it turned out fine. After the magnifier had been removed, I started with 600, then 1000, 1500, and finished with 2000 sandpaper (not much difference between 1500 and 2000). Final polishing with 'Simichrome' metal/plastic polish made it shine like a new crystal.

I have removed a few magnifiers by sanding the magnifier off, sanding the top of the crystal, then polishing by hand...it's a bit of work but it usually turns out that you can not tell it had a magnifier.

Being able to spin the crystal just makes the job go faster.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...
Please Sign In or Sign Up