Bob Neville
·I wrote a few posts several months ago regarding dozens of pocket & wrist watches including 3 Rolexes that my father-in-law found in a box that had been in his father’s house when he passed. It turned out that one of the Rolexes is a Korean “Kolex”, but according to Ben Bridge the other 2 are legit. I helped him sell most of the stuff (almost $10K worth of watches, coins, and jewelry) except a few sentimental items and the 2 real Rolexes. He surprised me yesterday with a Christmas gift of one of the Rolexes. He has the paperwork for both of them, but we can’t determine which documents go with which Rolex, so this one was either made in October 1951 or July 1953.
I have started tracking the accuracy, and after 24 hours resting on the edge opposite the crown it’s 64 seconds slow (-1:04 / day). I’m currently tracking the next 24 hours leaving it face-up.
I’d like to actually wear it occasionally, so I’d like to get it serviced. According to my FIL the guy he spoke with at Ben Bridge said it would probably cost at least $1,000 for a Rolex authorized service, it would have to be shipped-off to Seattle, and it would take 2 months. There must be competent watch-makers locally who are not “Rolex certified” but can still do an excellent job of servicing this watch. I live in Orange County CA – can anyone refer someone in my area? Even if I have to possibly go to LA or San Diego.
As you can see in the pictures the original bracelet is damaged and separated at the clasp. I can hook it back together but it’s still prone to coming apart. It’s too small for my wrist so even if it was repaired it still wouldn’t work for me. I’d also be concerned that given its age and unknown condition it might break while I’m wearing it and the watch could get damaged. I was thinking an oxblood-red leather band would look nice with this watch – any thoughts/suggestions from anyone? This original bracelet must have some value not only in just the gold content but the fact that it’s original to the early 1950’s - assuming it could be repaired, or parts used for authentic spare links & clasp for a repair of another bracelet from the same time period. Any thoughts on what the bracelet might be worth? I’m just thinking if I sell or trade the bracelet then that might pay for the service and new leather band?
I have started tracking the accuracy, and after 24 hours resting on the edge opposite the crown it’s 64 seconds slow (-1:04 / day). I’m currently tracking the next 24 hours leaving it face-up.
I’d like to actually wear it occasionally, so I’d like to get it serviced. According to my FIL the guy he spoke with at Ben Bridge said it would probably cost at least $1,000 for a Rolex authorized service, it would have to be shipped-off to Seattle, and it would take 2 months. There must be competent watch-makers locally who are not “Rolex certified” but can still do an excellent job of servicing this watch. I live in Orange County CA – can anyone refer someone in my area? Even if I have to possibly go to LA or San Diego.
As you can see in the pictures the original bracelet is damaged and separated at the clasp. I can hook it back together but it’s still prone to coming apart. It’s too small for my wrist so even if it was repaired it still wouldn’t work for me. I’d also be concerned that given its age and unknown condition it might break while I’m wearing it and the watch could get damaged. I was thinking an oxblood-red leather band would look nice with this watch – any thoughts/suggestions from anyone? This original bracelet must have some value not only in just the gold content but the fact that it’s original to the early 1950’s - assuming it could be repaired, or parts used for authentic spare links & clasp for a repair of another bracelet from the same time period. Any thoughts on what the bracelet might be worth? I’m just thinking if I sell or trade the bracelet then that might pay for the service and new leather band?