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IS this movement considered clean and oiled?
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need a macro shot to see the surface finish properly.
oiled is another questioon, u cant tell from pics.
and was it oiled correctly is another question.
for running fucntion, u need to put the watch on a witschi machine to see the rate deviation, amplitude and beat error in order to accurately guage the function.
hope this helps
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hey Bros, thanks for the answers. btw when u mentioned that the watch is oiled... what does it mean? every parts are oiled with a thin film of oil? or only certain parts. Any pics or illustration of an oiled Rolex movement in any of the website that shows this?
tks.
There is a very fine line between this "hobby" and "mental illness."
Look on the wife's face when VISA bill arrived, Priceless!!!!
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Originally posted by SeaRolex View Posthey Bros, thanks for the answers. btw when u mentioned that the watch is oiled... what does it mean? every parts are oiled with a thin film of oil? or only certain parts. Any pics or illustration of an oiled Rolex movement in any of the website that shows this?
tks.
usually for a watch. you need to oil the jewels and pivots only. you dont any-o-how whack oil all over the place.
with movements the oiling is very specific. certain kinds of oil for certain places only.
an example is here for a oiling chart for IWC. i dont have rolex, but its very similar.
the oils used industry wide are made by Mobeius. and there are different types for different applications. up to 5-10 different types may be used in the construction of a watch.
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wow... can we oil it ourselves? imagine if u hv the Similar chart for Rolex ... hey can we use mobile synthentics oil... last u for few thousands miles...There is a very fine line between this "hobby" and "mental illness."
Look on the wife's face when VISA bill arrived, Priceless!!!!
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Uh, unless the automatic mechanism has been removed, I dont think that is a Rolex movement. The caseback appears to house the automatic rotor, but there is no rotor viable.
I dont have any images, but the beginning of this video shows a 1570 that appears similar: http://www.minus4plus6.com/ringtones...ssemblyPT3.wmv
Looks clean though....
-Sheldon
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Originally posted by sheldonsmith View PostUh, unless the automatic mechanism has been removed, I dont think that is a Rolex movement. The caseback appears to house the automatic rotor, but there is no rotor viable.
I dont have any images, but the beginning of this video shows a 1570 that appears similar: http://www.minus4plus6.com/ringtones...ssemblyPT3.wmv
Looks clean though....
-SheldonThere is a very fine line between this "hobby" and "mental illness."
Look on the wife's face when VISA bill arrived, Priceless!!!!
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