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Years ago I removed a movement from a Mark 2 that had a broken crystal and glass floating around. It made me a bit nervous but I was successful. I actually put it back into another Mark 2 case for the time being. I am entertaining the idea of doing this myself but first I'll ask a local watchmaker whom I sort of trust. I don't know him well enough to really know. But I don't want to loose this!
I was doing some light reading on pusher replacement, etc..., and I thing this tool is needed: Bergeon 5901-P27 to tighten the pusher button. I don't really need it at this point I don't think. My question is, "why do people replace the pushers if they still have originals?"
I see people making comments like, "all original except the pushers" and it seems to hurt the value. Do they simply wear out? It seems they probably do over time but is there a gasket inside and the spring that can simply be replaced, keeping the original?
Just purchased a 69 Speedmaster 145.022 with original crown and pushers- no service marks inside case and all indicators and appearance consistent with entirely original specimen- even bezel can be dated as it is a "220" Error example dating to 1970 (with a few unfortunate paint chips). Like idea of maintaining original parts but my understanding is that pusher gaskets are difficult/impossible to replace, and crown gaskets not replaceable at all. Leaning towards replacing pushers and crown, but keeping originals for future reference/ potential resale. Make sense? Watchmakers...
I was doing some light reading on pusher replacement, etc..., and I thing this tool is needed: Bergeon 5901-P27 to tighten the pusher button.