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jakey555
·I Bought a 1960s vintage Seamaster chronostop fom a friend for £50 when I was about 20. I'm now 40!
It's a 1967 or 68, can't recall which. I deduced the year by finding an advert for the exact watch in an old National Geographic!
The watch stopped working when I was about 35. As far as I recall, I went away for a long sailing trip leaving it at home, (as I wasn't sure if it would still be waterproof), and after that lack of use it just wouldn't keep going. It goes for hours at a time but then stops.
It's been in my bathroom cabinet for years now. Now that I've got it out again it's sprung back into life, due I supose to its automatic movement although its sweep hand is not sweeping quite as smoothly as I remember it.
I've wound it up a bit, but I can't even remember if its a movement that needs to be wound up a bit once its been left.
It goes for a couple of hours then stops.
When I hold the winder and rock it back and forth I note that the whole of the inner face/ movement rocks, taps back and forth about half a mm around the axis of the winder. should this worry me?
I wonder if it just needs servicing? Its not been serviced for at least 20 years, and for all I know not even the 20 before that either. How much should I be looking at for someone to whip the back off it, give it a light servicing/ oiling and tell me how broken it actually is? Is there somebody likely for such a job local to Southampton UK, or perhaps it just being a watch people send them by post for servicing? Having said that it might be nice to be shown (briefly) what it looks like inside and what's gone wrong with it, so somewhere local and friendly might be nice.
I also had to put a rubbish elasticated stainless strap on it that I got from a market stall for the last few years it was working.
The original Omega strap is lovely and I'd like to get it back on If I ever get the watch going again, but unfortunately in my haste in a drunken episode many years ago I lost one of the pieces that covers one of the pins, so the bit that goes between the strap and the watch body. I've got the other one still. It has the number 625 embossed on it.
If I knew what this piece of bent stainless was called I might be able to find one on ebay. The world has changed a lot in 1970s watches I see- so where i had no hope whatsoever of finding this piece a few years back I see old watches like this are quite commonly now broken up for parts.
However, I'm not going to bother until I've found out whether it's worth getting the watch working again.
I guess i also ought to ask what these watches are worth now? That way I can evaluate what it would likely cost to fix against that. I note that similar vintage working order Geneve Dynamics are fetching £300-400 on ebay, but they are a little aesthetically 'challenging' so I have some hope that mine, once working could be worth a smidge more. But its hard to say as I can't find any like mine for sale. Don't get me wrong about the Geneve Dynamic. They are so retro looking I'm quite sure their time will come again, indeed I'm currently bidding on 2 of them on ebay! I only went on there to try to find out what mine is worth! I think they look awesome and there are so many for sale it looks possible to collect the whole available range in a couple of months, and they aren't ever likely to be worth much less than they currently are.
The glass on mine is a bit scratched but a) it is very light and Ive never made any attempt to polish it out, and B) it looks and feels like hard plastic so presumably, with care and the correct products most of it can be polished out?
It's just an old watch, but I really like the look of it now, and I've got some great memories of it and wonder if the time has come to think about getting it fixed.
I will post photos if I can work out how.
It's a 1967 or 68, can't recall which. I deduced the year by finding an advert for the exact watch in an old National Geographic!
The watch stopped working when I was about 35. As far as I recall, I went away for a long sailing trip leaving it at home, (as I wasn't sure if it would still be waterproof), and after that lack of use it just wouldn't keep going. It goes for hours at a time but then stops.
It's been in my bathroom cabinet for years now. Now that I've got it out again it's sprung back into life, due I supose to its automatic movement although its sweep hand is not sweeping quite as smoothly as I remember it.
I've wound it up a bit, but I can't even remember if its a movement that needs to be wound up a bit once its been left.
It goes for a couple of hours then stops.
When I hold the winder and rock it back and forth I note that the whole of the inner face/ movement rocks, taps back and forth about half a mm around the axis of the winder. should this worry me?
I wonder if it just needs servicing? Its not been serviced for at least 20 years, and for all I know not even the 20 before that either. How much should I be looking at for someone to whip the back off it, give it a light servicing/ oiling and tell me how broken it actually is? Is there somebody likely for such a job local to Southampton UK, or perhaps it just being a watch people send them by post for servicing? Having said that it might be nice to be shown (briefly) what it looks like inside and what's gone wrong with it, so somewhere local and friendly might be nice.
I also had to put a rubbish elasticated stainless strap on it that I got from a market stall for the last few years it was working.
The original Omega strap is lovely and I'd like to get it back on If I ever get the watch going again, but unfortunately in my haste in a drunken episode many years ago I lost one of the pieces that covers one of the pins, so the bit that goes between the strap and the watch body. I've got the other one still. It has the number 625 embossed on it.
If I knew what this piece of bent stainless was called I might be able to find one on ebay. The world has changed a lot in 1970s watches I see- so where i had no hope whatsoever of finding this piece a few years back I see old watches like this are quite commonly now broken up for parts.
However, I'm not going to bother until I've found out whether it's worth getting the watch working again.
I guess i also ought to ask what these watches are worth now? That way I can evaluate what it would likely cost to fix against that. I note that similar vintage working order Geneve Dynamics are fetching £300-400 on ebay, but they are a little aesthetically 'challenging' so I have some hope that mine, once working could be worth a smidge more. But its hard to say as I can't find any like mine for sale. Don't get me wrong about the Geneve Dynamic. They are so retro looking I'm quite sure their time will come again, indeed I'm currently bidding on 2 of them on ebay! I only went on there to try to find out what mine is worth! I think they look awesome and there are so many for sale it looks possible to collect the whole available range in a couple of months, and they aren't ever likely to be worth much less than they currently are.
The glass on mine is a bit scratched but a) it is very light and Ive never made any attempt to polish it out, and B) it looks and feels like hard plastic so presumably, with care and the correct products most of it can be polished out?
It's just an old watch, but I really like the look of it now, and I've got some great memories of it and wonder if the time has come to think about getting it fixed.
I will post photos if I can work out how.