altesporsche Posted March 9, 2020 Report Share Posted March 9, 2020 Hey fellas, looking for someone in North America to slightly machine a case for me. I have a phong 1655 case that needs about a .25 of a mill cut inside under the movement screw ring, it seems it’s not machined correctly for my 1570 movement. many direction would be appreciated ! Been waiting to get this franken together for almost a year lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oldtools Posted March 10, 2020 Report Share Posted March 10, 2020 You might check with JMB. https://rwg.cc/profile/24124-jmb/ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
altesporsche Posted March 10, 2020 Author Report Share Posted March 10, 2020 22 minutes ago, oldtools said: You might check with JMB. https://rwg.cc/profile/24124-jmb/ Yes yes yes, i had a brain fart lol Ive just messaged him. Hes done work for me before. CHeers ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
automatico Posted March 10, 2020 Report Share Posted March 10, 2020 "I have a phong 1655 case that needs about a .25 of a mill cut inside under the movement screw ring, it seems it’s not machined correctly for my 1570 movement." One fix might be to use a knife edge screw in place of a square edge screw. Something else when using casing screws with skirts...if the movement and dial does not turn freely inside the case when lining the stem up with the case tube, it can scratch paint off the dial when turning it. I never did mount a complete GMT movement in my Phong '1655' case but did put a 1570 in it with the correct date spacer and dial to see how it would fit and it was Ok except for two tight spots. I ground a tool bit to remove the burrs inside the groove but never did anything to it because it is close work with very little room for error. You need to remove the bezel/crystal or carefully clamp over the numbered bezel to mount the case in a four jaw chuck and center it...either that or put it in a 'self centering' three jaw chuck and see if it centers after a few tries. I decided to try running a small 1 inch OD cut-off wheel around inside the groove a few times by hand (not in a power tool) and see if it would remove the tight spots. This would probably be Ok for removing tight spots but would be slow going to widen the groove all the way around while keeping the cut-off wheel level in the groove. I have an MBK '5513' with the same problem and I used case clamps and screws in it rather than cut the groove wider. I have seen a few pictures of a 5513 with case clamps and screws. Here is a picture of a genuine 1655 with knife edge case screws and afaik many/most of them came that way. They are easy to spot because the knife edge skirt is wider than on screws with square edge skirts. https://sansomwatches.com/product/rolex-explorer-2-orange-hand-1655-steve-mcqueen-vintage/ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
altesporsche Posted March 10, 2020 Author Report Share Posted March 10, 2020 16 minutes ago, automatico said: "I have a phong 1655 case that needs about a .25 of a mill cut inside under the movement screw ring, it seems it’s not machined correctly for my 1570 movement." One fix might be to use a knife edge screw in place of a square edge screw. Something else when using casing screws with skirts...if the movement and dial does not turn freely inside the case when lining the stem up with the case tube, it can scratch paint off the dial when turning it. I never did mount a complete GMT movement in my Phong '1655' case but did put a 1570 in it with the correct date spacer and dial to see how it would fit and it was Ok except for two tight spots. I ground a tool bit to remove the burrs inside the groove but never did anything to it because it is close work with very little room for error. You need to remove the bezel/crystal or carefully clamp over the numbered bezel to mount the case in a four jaw chuck and center it...either that or put it in a 'self centering' three jaw chuck and see if it centers after a few tries. I decided to try running a small 1 inch OD cut-off wheel around inside the groove a few times by hand (not in a power tool) and see if it would remove the tight spots. This would probably be Ok for removing tight spots but would be slow going to widen the groove all the way around while keeping the cut-off wheel level in the groove. I have an MBK '5513' with the same problem and I used case clamps and screws in it rather than cut the groove wider. I have seen a few pictures of a 5513 with case clamps and screws. Here is a picture of a genuine 1655 with knife edge case screws and afaik many/most of them came that way. They are easy to spot because the knife edge skirt is wider than on screws with square edge skirts. https://sansomwatches.com/product/rolex-explorer-2-orange-hand-1655-steve-mcqueen-vintage/ Thanks for the insight ! I have looked at it a few times and thought about taking my time to grind it out by hand with a small bit. Maybe ill try it again when i get home. Ive just been so busy and want this together so bad at this point lol I already have knife edge screws for the movement as that is what they used in all of the vintage rolexes anyways. This is literally a ball hair off from fitting at this point. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
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 accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now