fakir Posted October 13, 2010 Report Posted October 13, 2010 I'm a long-timer from back when rwg.cc and its predecessor were around. I haven't been back for a long time (around 2-3 years), so I can't even remember what my old login was. Anyway, way back when I used to service my watches with The Zigmeister who did awesome lume, but he was hard to get a hold of and that was really the clincher for me in this hobby. So I come back now, and I have some questions: 1) Do I need to service a super seadweller with the Swiss ETA 2836-2 movement? Or do you think it's good enough without it? 2) If I did decide to service it and lume it: who do I turn to in N.America, and preferably in Canada? I really appreciate the help. I already have a SSD that was serviced and lumed by The Zigmeister, but given he is difficult to get a hold of, I wanted to buy a second one to use on a daily basis - I don't want to ding up my good SSD since I can't service it easier (or can I? Is there an alternative?). thanks!!
dabom Posted October 13, 2010 Report Posted October 13, 2010 Scratch that.. I did remember my old login after all, it was "dabom". Okay - back online! Thanks for the answers!
freddy333 Posted October 14, 2010 Report Posted October 14, 2010 Welcome back. All mechanical movements require routine services, generally every 5-7 years. The Zigmeister, as he is now called (I believe he officially changed his handle to this), is still your best bet for lume & service.
Toadtorrent Posted October 14, 2010 Report Posted October 14, 2010 I wouldn't trust my A7750's to anybody else in North America. They can do gen ETA 7750's...but I wouldn't trust my A7750's to them...just Zig. If you are in Toronto, and are looking at people who can service an ETA non chrono, PM me and I can give you the names of a couple shops. Welcome back!!
14060 or 16610? Posted October 15, 2010 Report Posted October 15, 2010 Welcome back. All mechanical movements require routine services, generally every 5-7 years... +1. I agree, except I say generally every 3 to 5 years. That's about how long it takes a tiny droplet of oil to dry up.
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