Has anyone managed to confirm if the previous extract team were just creating dial information?

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High School Latin class… ah, those were the days!

Dinosaur's still roamed, but I always got along. Some got chomped. Se la vie
 
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High School Latin class… ah, those were the days!

Dinosaur's still roamed, but I always got along. Some got chomped. Se la vie

I'm guessing French class didn't go as well as Latin did. C'est la vie... 😉
 
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I'm guessing French class didn't go as well as Latin did. C'est la vie... 😉

irony, talking about Latin but using an expression in French…..phonetically, never took French.

my apologies on the error
 
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Out of curiosity, was a photo of the watch face showing the dial included/required in the EoA request? Additionally, was the EoA request made via the online process or at a OB in the USA?

I don't know, actually: I bought the watch and the extract from a nice OF user who lives in Germany, so I suppose he got it via the online process.
 
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Out of curiosity, was a photo of the watch face showing the dial included/required in the EoA request? Additionally, was the EoA request made via the online process or at a OB in the USA?

FWIW, I have requested two EoA in person at the OB in Atlanta. In neither case was I asked to provide any photographs. They just asked for serial number and any other information I had (e.g. reference number).
 
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FWIW, I have requested two EoA in person at the OB in Atlanta. In neither case was I asked to provide any photographs. They just asked for serial number and any other information I had (e.g. reference number).

The process was different in the US, because in the US you couldn't do it on-line. For the rest of the world that was able to do it on-line, photos were required when you filled out the form on the Omega web site...