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

Posts
8,088
Likes
58,133
High School Latin class… ah, those were the days!

Dinosaur's still roamed, but I always got along. Some got chomped. Se la vie
 
Posts
28,015
Likes
71,478
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... 😉
 
Posts
8,088
Likes
58,133
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
 
Posts
1,417
Likes
5,345
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.
 
Posts
545
Likes
1,012
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).
 
Posts
28,015
Likes
71,478
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...