Ronin Posted September 20, 2010 Report Posted September 20, 2010 Need some extra discerning eyes on this. Does this look like a white DW or Silver? TIA
ubiquitous Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 You need some of these (old pic ):
Dizzy Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 Definatly white on that watch. You can also tell by the font. If you compare it to Ubi's pics, you will see the difference.
Nanuq Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 Here's a silver datewheel. Note how it's brighter than the rest of the dial. The silver reflects a CRAZY amount of light.
vlydog Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 Where is the line drawn, between silver and white, as to the year of production?
ubiquitous Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 The lines are blurred with white v. silver datewheels as there were many white datewheels swapped into watches during service.
Ronin Posted September 21, 2010 Author Report Posted September 21, 2010 Thanks guys. The above watch is a 6 mil serial, so with the exception of service replacements, one might guess somewhere between 5 and 6 mill serials they went white. Thanks!
ubiquitous Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 Thanks guys. The above watch is a 6 mil serial, so with the exception of service replacements, one might guess somewhere between 5 and 6 mill serials they went white. Thanks! I'd guess that the DW in your pic is a service replacement; seeing as how it's fitted with a service replacement 'SWISS' lumi dial, lumi hands, thin font service insert etc...
freddy333 Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 Nanuq is right. Unless you get the angle & light just right, a gen silver datewheel tends to look white. But when the stars fall into place, you get
JoJo35 Posted September 21, 2010 Report Posted September 21, 2010 None of the 1665's or 1680's came with white date wheels. All white ones are service replacements. In fact, original equipment silver date wheels were carried over into the 16800 and 16660 production. Going a step further, before replacement "white" datewheels were produced, the "brushed" silver datewheels were common replacement parts. FYI, most original (plastic sub/seadweller) silver datewheels have a plain silver appearance without the bright brushed look.
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