- Posts
- 3
- Likes
- 5
Please consider donating to help offset our high running costs.
It’s a very nice watch, nice shape, good size and very reliable.
Cosmetically, I’d get jewellers cloth (nothing abrasive) and rub the tarnish gold plate gently until it shines.
I can’t see if the crystal is scratched but I’d polish it with Polywatch.
I can’t tell you with the caseback being unscrewed, which movement it is but, assuming it just needs a service, that would cost you in the UK, at a local watch repairer, about £120 plus parts and postage. It’s well worth having it serviced. Omega watches are very and many of us regularly wear 50/60 year old models.
If you’re not sure where to take/send it, post where you are and someone will make a recommendation
I always thought that for the gold plated watches it's more difficult to restore to original glory..because if you replate it possible do not have the exact same colour..
This is my mid 70s with a 552 movement (no date) bought from the son of the original owner.
I can’t now recall if I replaced the crystal but everything else is original (I think).
Find a good local shop to service it. Don’t send it to omega.
Actually, this one might be worth sending to Omega. They won't do anything bad to it.
The automatic "don't send it to Omega" is not a universal truth, and isn't useful to parrot every time.
Maybe you’re right. Wouldn’t they change the hands though?
For what you get, the price is generally pretty good.
US price for an automatic that is not precious metal is $550 inclusive of most parts. Nesbit's charges extra for some parts. My local guy is also $550 these days, parts extra. There are some that charge less, but they often don't bother to adjust the watch more than a minimal amount.
In my view, for something you pay for once every five years for a watch you might wear every day, saving a hundred dollars and risking a lower quality of service is not something I care to do.
Omega also offers a two-year service warranty.
Yes, that's not outrageous, and I'm award that it is the standard service price on the website. My impression is that Omega charges a different, and much higher price, to service and restore vintage watches that are 50+ years old. If the OP chooses this course, it will be interesting to get first-hand feedback on the price.
They might. As long as they're the same, who cares? If the answer is that you care, then it might not be for you.
Despite having the same top-of-the-line movements as more expensive watches, a gold-plated Geneve is not considered valuable or desireable and approximately no one collects them. They are, on the other hand, quite wearable and the dial can be quite attractive. A service from Omega would include crystal, crown, movement parts, and caseback gasket. I do not know whether they can do anything to refinish the case because it's thinly plated, so likely just a cleaning with a tarnish-removing chemical. For what you get, the price is generally pretty good.
If you decide you'd rather keep some of these old parts on the watch, then another choice might be better for you. Changing the crown, crystal, caseback gasket, and perhaps the crown tube will ensure water resistance.