Hello. A nice person from here messaged me on Reddit.

Posts
3
Likes
15
Well as the title says, someone directed me here from Reddit. I posted my fathers watch knowing little about it. Care instructions etc. most of everyone was super helpful. I learned it’s a James Bond watch. Omega seamaster and it’s battery powered. I was asking whether I needed to send it in to Omega to service. General consensus there was yes, but some said no.

a little backstory; it was my dads he passed away in 2015 this watch was his every day wear. He wore it every single day since he bought it. I was directed to the serial number which I think means it was made in 1998. He wore this watch through everything. So every mark on it tells his story. Anyway. I just wanted to share: and I I guess re ask where I should service, what it needs, and just general info on it. Thank you all so much for your time.
 
Posts
6,541
Likes
26,514
Welcome to the forum and thank you for sharing! Where about in the world are you located? With that, we will be able to give you more guided help on where to send it 😀
 
Posts
30,929
Likes
36,346
Nice, looks like a 2541.80 quartz as used in Goldeneye
 
Posts
3
Likes
15
Welcome to the forum and thank you for sharing! Where about in the world are you located? With that, we will be able to give you more guided help on where to send it 😀

Hello there! I’m in South Georgia now, USA. And thank you!
 
Posts
30,929
Likes
36,346
The three things I’d try to preserve on that watch are the dial hands and bezel, the bezel looks great with that fade to it and a new deep blue one won’t look nearly as cool
 
Posts
3
Likes
15
The three things I’d try to preserve on that watch are the dial hands and bezel, the bezel looks great with that fade to it and a new deep blue one won’t look nearly as cool
Awesome! Thank you! I did notice from pictures online that the bezel seemed a lot darker than mine. I guess after so many years of constant wear my dads faded a touch. Makes more sense now. Thanks for clearing that up for me.
 
Posts
586
Likes
765
I would advise you find quality independent watchmaker rather than sending it to Omega. So you avoid it to be refurbished "as new".

You do want to mantain some signs of age, which are part of the watch and of its life with your father. An independent will just clean it in an ultrasonic bath, change battery and is good for a few years to go.

If you have no intention of using it, the other option is to put it back in his box and keep it as it is, as a memory
 
Posts
428
Likes
1,354
Beautiful piece!
Definitely, You have to make it clear to the watchmaker who service it, to keep that fantastic patina!
After all, You want Your fathers watch, not a new (looking) one!
 
Posts
298
Likes
906
Yay! You came over.

Do take your time with selecting a watchmaker to trust your heirloom to, as noted on Reddit - Omega have a habit of replacing parts. The worn parts on your watch are its soul.
 
Posts
565
Likes
1,176
The three things I’d try to preserve on that watch are the dial hands and bezel, the bezel looks great with that fade to it and a new deep blue one won’t look nearly as cool

Would agree with this and particularly with the faded bezel. They look far better faded in real life than on a photo. Big fan of the bracelet as well.
 
Posts
298
Likes
906
+1 on the faded bezel. It elevates the look. It is such a great piece.
 
Posts
1,534
Likes
3,231
A modern classic Omega design - congrats! If it works, and your funds are limited, you can get a fresh battery installed and wear it. A service will clean everything up nicely but there are plenty of parts for these watches if you want to delay the additional TLC. Quartz watches don't require the same service frequency.
 
Posts
3,602
Likes
37,902
Nice watch and souvenirs... Hopefully, you will be adding yours before passing it on to the next generation, but not so quickly so you can first enjoy it.

As many said, advise to keep the bezel as it looks good and it is also in very clean condition (no major scratches etc).

Welcome to the forum!
 
Posts
298
Likes
906
A modern classic Omega design - congrats! If it works, and your funds are limited, you can get a fresh battery installed and wear it. .. Quartz watches don't require the same service frequency.

This. This is what I would do. Have the battery changed & see if that gets it going. I wouldn't really touch a thing after that. Wearing the watch honours the way your father wore it every day.
 
Posts
16,307
Likes
44,937
Welcome and such a nice keepsake of your father. As said already, you can have the battery replaced by any decent watch shop and if it runs, it runs. The hope is that the battery in there hasn’t leaked. It will eventually need to be serviced though as there are moving parts, and the waterproof seals on the back and crown are probably toast by this point- so don’t go swimming with it until it has been pressure tested.
 
Posts
10,083
Likes
48,396
Very nice. Great reminder of your father and cool you are looking to take care of it. I have a couple of my grandfathers and fathers watches. They both liked watches but thought it was unwise to put a lot of money into something like a watch (damn they would be pissed at me) I think watches are one of the best heirlooms someone can get. They tend to stick around and I bet you can always picture your father wearing it. Glad you made the journey from Reddit, in the past I saw two posts on Reddit of people who had inherited omegas and had questions I pmd them suggesting they ask over here I don’t think they ever did. Take good care, it’s a wild world and beware.
 
Posts
620
Likes
626
What an awesome memento to remember your father by.
I would imagine that your local Omega boutique would carry the correct battery for it and can pop the back off of it and install it for you while you wait in the store. It looks like the Levy Jewelers in Savannah is listed as authorized retailer. So they might be a good start for just a basic battery change and quick visual assessment of the movement.

As mentioned already, I wouldn't let them take it in for a full service (something where you leave it with them and then get it back many days/weeks later) until you can get a recommendation from someone in the SE United States that has experience with an independent watch maker servicing their vintage Omega. Sometimes Omega, or other watchmakers will replace and polish away much of the character of the watch with the intention of "making it look new again".
Edited:
 
Posts
9,951
Likes
15,624
The three things I’d try to preserve on that watch are the dial hands and bezel, the bezel looks great with that fade to it and a new deep blue one won’t look nearly as cool
All true but that looks like a Superluminova model to me so even if the dial or hands were changed they wouldn’t look any different and there wouldn’t be the obvious mismatch you get on the earlier tritium pieces. The bezel is particularly nice with an even fade but little damage. It would indeed be a shame if that were swapped.
Edited: