Hello community. I got this for $12 last year. I have no idea how to get into the back to see if the movement is correct to the style, nor what year this might be. Might it be a redaial? It runs but stops in a minute or so. Should I leave the dial alone, or try to remove lacquering?
THanks, peace.
This is my heirloom from my father, and my first too!.. Omega Speedmaster Ref. 145.012 67 sp, he bought it new in the frankfurt airport duty free in 1968.
Just picked up my first vintage Omega (actually my FIRST Omega and my FIRST vintage watch). It is a 1968 145.022 transitional. Bezel and bracelet are replacements but the dial looks very good and I thought the lume looked very attractive.
I bought my first vintage only 4 months ago on eBay after very little research; I think I paid a good price for a great watch, but it was certainly a case of beginner's luck!
When I saw the same model (ref.2782) being sold on ΩF out of my price range, I thought I might find one cheaper on eBay. I did. When I threw in a bid, viola!
Since then (November), I've bought two Seamasters and another Connie (two to arrive this week !), all three of them from trusted fellow Forum members 👍😁.
My first Omega was purchased off of Ebay in about 1999-2000 and ought to look like DougieDude's nice one ... but it doesn't. This older photo may be a scanned snapshot.
Still, with decent maintenance, it's been a trouble-free watch and has been worn quite a lot. It's currently away being serviced and I'm considering trying a dial restoration while it's in the shop anyway. Any advise on best place to re-do the dial would be appreciated.
Personally I would try to get a donor or an already done bad redial, to refinish and keep the original as is. Probably the most expensive way to do it, but that would be my choice if I had the resources to do so.