lucreative
·Hi OF Vintage Collectors! I recently jumped into vintage watches and have the opportunity to purchase a Heuer Big Eyes, which I think is a 418, in 18k gold with the Valjoux 23 movement. I trust this seller, since he sold me a few nice watches before, but he disclosed some issues with this Heuer. Mainly, the dial has been refinished and the hands replaced. I always wanted a watch with the Valjoux 23, so the price he was offering mainly take this into account.
Here are some pics of the dial and movement, which is signed "Ed. Heuer & Co." which dates this to the 1950s. The dial looks extremely clean, too clean, and it does not match other original examples of this watch. However, tapping into the vast knowledge of OF members, does anyone know where this type of dial would have come from? It does not look handpainted, so the dial is a better qaulity dial and the printing looks pristine. It actually looks similar to an Omega chronograph dial from the same era, including the hands. The caseback has also been modified to be screwed in, since it's a snapback, but the extra gold can be easily removed to original. The lugs has another layer of gold for the screw and the original lugs have not been damaged.
Would this watch still be worth purchasing? The size 35mm is a tad small, but the thin bezel and "Big Eyes" makes this very much wearable. What do you all think?
Thanks for the advice!
The second to last pic is an example of an Omega chrono with similar dial, including the printed numbers being almost exact, especially the "1" with the cap instead of a straight line. I wonder if these dials where made for jewelers as replacement dials for big eye chronographs like these.
The last pic is how the original Heuer dial and hands should look like.
FYI, he would be willing to sell me this watch sub $2k.
Here are some pics of the dial and movement, which is signed "Ed. Heuer & Co." which dates this to the 1950s. The dial looks extremely clean, too clean, and it does not match other original examples of this watch. However, tapping into the vast knowledge of OF members, does anyone know where this type of dial would have come from? It does not look handpainted, so the dial is a better qaulity dial and the printing looks pristine. It actually looks similar to an Omega chronograph dial from the same era, including the hands. The caseback has also been modified to be screwed in, since it's a snapback, but the extra gold can be easily removed to original. The lugs has another layer of gold for the screw and the original lugs have not been damaged.
Would this watch still be worth purchasing? The size 35mm is a tad small, but the thin bezel and "Big Eyes" makes this very much wearable. What do you all think?
Thanks for the advice!
The second to last pic is an example of an Omega chrono with similar dial, including the printed numbers being almost exact, especially the "1" with the cap instead of a straight line. I wonder if these dials where made for jewelers as replacement dials for big eye chronographs like these.
The last pic is how the original Heuer dial and hands should look like.
FYI, he would be willing to sell me this watch sub $2k.