Oil Filling a Watch:How to tutorial. SO EASY!!!!
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- Опубликовано: 10 мар 2020
- I took my Mathey-Tissot Quartz Watch and filled it with 100% Silicone Oil with a viscosity of 50. I found the oil on ebay(search the brand label seen in the video). The overall project took about 15 minutes. It was extremely easy and came out wonderful the first time. No bubbles in the case, no bubbles under the crystal near the dial, completely filled in again super easy.
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I did a couple of these oil fills on cheapo casios I got to practice dial customization and some other mods. They look brilliant but I was worried about the battery life so I ran some probes into one of them and found the current draw was 3-4 times higher after the oil fill as the movement has to work harder to keep time. This means a three year battery will last about 10 months in 50ct oil. Also make sure the crown is fitted but in the out position as you tighten the back otherwise the hydraulic pressure that can be caused as the back closes can pop the front glass off!
Sooty S great points to know, especially the battery life
Couple of months on and the dial prints have faded quite a bit faster than I would have expected. They were cheapo transfer types rather than tampo prints (these were just trial pieces) but I would had be expected years not months before fade became noticeable. I wonder if the oil dissolves the inks?
Silicone oil is 'minimally reactive,' meaning the likelihood of stripping dyes and paints are minimal in relation to mineral oils. However, this doesn't mean that it's 100% non-reactive; as an oil, it's eventually going to strip and fade any reactive dye (ie, 99.9% of colored dials and markers in watches.)
This is why you don't see anyone doing these to expensive watches; the hydromod began as a purposeful mod done by divers in the fifties who couldn't afford a Fifty Fathoms or Rolex, and needed to quickly increase the density of a minimally waterproof cheap watch like a Timex or Caravelle in order to use once for a deep dive. Afterwards, the watch got tossed, as it was now basically useless for everyday wear.
Marvin, I agree. After the faded test dial last year I got curious...
I made up about 30 vials and put a bit of brass with a different combination of dial printing type in each, with various fluids. Transfer print, sublimation print, acrylic paint, enamel paint, different undercoats, lacquers etc. Some vials got silicone oil, some got flourinert, some just air. Left most in the sun, hid some away as controls.
Learnt a lot. Main takeaways were that silicone oil accelerated fading in sunlight but made no difference in dark. The transfer inks performed worst, then acrylic. Sublimation wasn't affected and was still looking as good as the control a year later. Enamel was fine as were quality artists acrylics. Put some lume on some of them and found super luninova changed colour a bit when it got wet but still glows fine. Glow in the dark plastic was unaffected. If you are doing this, either punch dial markers from thin sheet or buy ones with glow already in them and it'll look great.
Also flourinert caused less fading but it's horrible and escapes from pretty much any enclosure. It will certainly get out of normal crown seals over a few months and will pass through some plastics and rubbers. I suspect the vapour is nasty. Not for mods - don't go near it unless you are making a metal case specifically to contain it.
@@sootys4024 yes, it does.
Great! I just watched a video of an oil filled Pulsar quartz! No damage to 800 Bar! Now I know I can dive to nearly the bottom of the Puerto Rican trench ( 24,000 ft ) with no worries!
You know it’s funny that there are two points of view from this video(I also just did one on the vaer solar diver) and you either love it or hate it. Not sure why people hate it
After a year of doing this to a couple of watches, they all stopped running. They were quartz watches. I did it to 6 watches of different brands. Some leaked little by little, and they all stopped eventually. I absolutely love the look, but they stopped. So I stopped doing it to the new watches I bought. I did try to change batteries on them, nothing.
I get it. I never had a problem leaking for changing the battery in the Mathey. Here’s a link to show about 6 months later. I compare it to another non-oil watch. Both changing the time as well as water resistance.
I’d say try again…
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
you put oil on quartz watches? oils are meant for automatics
It looks great. Wow, I never knew this was a thing! Subscribed.
Thanks!
I just did this and yes, it so easy. I did the Casio and it looks amazing. Thanks for the tutorial. (mine's been running fine a few weeks and I used mineral oil for cutting boards.)
Having some experience using mineral oil for PCs, I would advise against it. Mineral oil will make any plastic or rubber components brittle over time and will accelerate the eventual destruction of the watch. I do not have experience with silicone oil so cannot say it's long term effects.
Did this yesterday with a similar mathey-tissot I already owned and came out great.
Great to hear!
Looks so cool! Seems like you’d want a container that you can turn the watch on its side to let the bubbles out.
When I changed the battery recently, I just filled a small container with oil and changed everything underneath to avoid bubbles in the future. It was pretty easy.
I do it to digital watches like the Casio AE-1200 and 1300. I also use 1,000 cst, which means no leaks and better water resistance.
I can only imagine what a pain in the ass it is going to be to change that battery later XD
I know Im randomly asking but does anybody know a way to log back into an instagram account..?
I stupidly forgot my account password. I would love any tips you can give me.
@Kylo Fabian thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and Im in the hacking process now.
I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
@Kylo Fabian it did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thank you so much, you saved my account :D
@Messiah Justin You are welcome :D
Don't do it. It screwed up my Casio Duro. Slowed time, Leaked, Messy, Overall effect not worth it!.
What oil did you use?
still no answer :)
Olive oil💀
Coconut oil
Grapeseed oil
What would you think about filling a quartz seiko ssc701? Also does anybody know how a seiko mechaquartz would work out with flourinert?
+
looks awesome. might do it with my citizen quarz
I have reservations about doing this to one of my watches. My collection is small and I saved up to get what I got. Not sure I want to gamble on my abilities or whether the watch movement can handle this mod. Also, I'm not sure what the point is, I'm not a saturation diver, but to each their own. Have fun. 😂
That looks amazing!! Thanks for the video, made a subscriber outta me.
1962hellen thanks!!
can I apply oil in my swatch watch? and make the sound quiter?
I'm a massive watch lover, and had NO IDEA this was a thing. nice video, proper interesting.
Awesome! Thank you!!
I found a watch in the dirt it's a psycho very old and I put a battery in it after I cleaned it up now it doesn't it doesn't take should I put oil in it or I don't know what to do
You can also add different colour dyes to change the colour of the oil😊
I can’t see a reason to do this. Does the oil thicken if it gets cold.
You did a great job
Thanks! I also have another more recent video with a Vaer solar diver
Is "Mont Marte Premium Silicone Oil 2oz (60ml) for Acrylic Pouring Paint Cells and Fluid Art" from amazon will work as 50cst silicone oil? I am not able to buy the same thing as you. Please help
I took a look at it. It’s good. As long as it’s 100% silicone oil with the low viscosity it’s fine. That should work well
Aesome video, thanks! Does the oil come out when you pull out the crown to adjust the time or date? Is it best to only attempt this on screw down crown watches?
I’m this video I adjust it and answer that question! Which is no
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
can i use only pure sillicone oil viscosity 1000 cst?
Excuse my ignorance, but what happens when you open the crown to adjust the time? Does it seep oil or drip?
Joseph Wallace nothing at all. There is a seal on the inside. I would still recommend the dive version with a screw down crown. But I haven’t had it leak yet
I am seriously considering doing this to my CWC royal navy diver. Have you noticed any drawbacks to doing this yet?
Nothing so far, I really love though the way the Dial image pushes out against the curved crystal. I am still considering getting a 200 m diver and then doing the same thing
Apparently using silicone oil turns the lime yellow, however others use a another oil which doesn't do that and more runnier but is like 40 dollars per bottle
just wondering if this mod would improve legibility of a white dial/golden hands combo? thank you
Yeah, it’s gonna improve the legibility of any watch. I am doing this video again with a solar watch and updating it. Stay tuned. It’ll release in a couple weeks
@@allthingsrandom8137 thank you. solar with analog dial or digital display?
Hi, i have a blancpain villeret 40mm watch in stainless steel 2 years old (2020) watch and i noticed that it is stiff when i try to wind it. It has 72 hours power reserve.
Example: When i wind it, it is tight..
I have to pull out the crown then i have to push it back in, in order for it to be buttery smooth when i wind it. It keeps excellent time BUT it is just stiff/tight if i wind it without pulling out the crown and pushing it back in first.. feels like resistance..
Any idea on what could it be? I dont have warranty.
My jlc reverso is so smooth , i dont have to pull out crown and push back in for it to be smooth wind.
Do you think with silicone grease on the crown seal/gasket will make it better?
I don’t think I would do anything that I wasn’t 100% sure of.
The gasket may be dry and that’s why it’s resistance when it’s pushed all the way in. A little silicone is not gonna hurt, Just be very conservative about the amount you use
"i have a blancpain villeret 40mm watch", No, you have a fake. That's why you say later "I dont have warranty." You liars are so easy to spot.
Luminescence glow shot???
Can it be done to a seiko kinetic?
Does oil filling affect time keeping if you do this in an automatic watch?
You can only do this to a quartz
Can you convert a automatic to Quartz movement , because I have a broken omega seamaster 007 clone an I want a Quartzmovement in it
Most the time, 99% of the time the case is the exact same. The only thing you have to be careful of is the movement holder, and the movement crown stem being the right length. Everything else should line Up just fine
This, plus a nice AR coated sapphire crystal for zero glare
I'm glad you checked it for accuracy, but it just seems like the increased viscosity would slow down the watch. Any long term results on this? I love the look!
Watch needed a battery change about 2 years in. I recently did the same thing to a Vaer Solar dive, check it out on the channel, so a battery change is not necessary
Thanks for the tutorial. So you know whether these oil-filled mods ’fly’ well? I want to do one for my father who lives overseas but I am concerned that the oil might pop the crystal out when the air pressure falls in flight (when it’s being shipped to him)
Here is what I would say, if you choose a watch with a screw down in case back and screw down crown shouldn’t have any issues.
For example Mathey-Tissot has a quartz diver that looks the exact same that offers 200 m of water resistance, with a screw down crown and case back for $108. That would be a good option, and I couldn’t see that failing in flight
liquids barely compress with air pressure, only air does. so with the watch being oil filled, the risk of popping the cystal is even lower than without (which is already almost non-existent). The real concern should be temperature. So make sure that the oil isnt too cold or warm when you fill the watch
@@aole89 completly correct!
Would leak out when you pull out the crown to set the time?
No, there is an internal gasket. What the video below, I go through how it doesn’t leak in real time
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.htmlsi=Rv7sryjJ7wMmQr3G
Should be better to leave a little ar bubble to alow oir to expand when hot ?
Mário Alfeu Carvalho ruclips.net/video/sZkrjHINtU8/видео.html
In digital watches, ok. But when you put oil at the movement, the some parts needs more power to slide. Yes, the battery will shortly end and the accuracy will not be the same... Talking about dive, the watch with oil will increases the limits!
What about when you have to adjust the date or set the time?
I do this very thing a year later after having the watch. Watch the video you’ll see me do complete functionality setting the time and it has never leaked once.
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.htmlsi=7epJ1zv9Gl3i0Qr_
what will, If I want to adjus the date or time, will Oil will be leaked?
Does oil spill out when you unscrew the crown?
Kevin Kuntz in this video I actually show when you unscrew and adjust the time nothing happens. It’s a little more than halfway through
ruclips.net/video/uQzUaD5p9rU/видео.html
Can we add color to the silicon oil In order to make the watch more colorful ? Thank u
Tobi Nguyen you can, but understand is may not be as clear
Amazing effect...
Going to attempt my first one of these on my Casio MRW200H next week! Hopefully it turns out as well as yours!
Did you try it?
@@gmansplit Did he try it?
Can you let me know if you use the crown Will oil leak out 4:28
@@allonsypyreneesit depends on your watch and how thin is the oil you used but just to be sure adjust the time with the crown pointing upwards 😂
@@Strideo1 did he did told you that did he did it or not?
Is there more or less chances for air bubbles if going straight in through the crown hole?
More chance. Doing it from the inside out Had such a good outcome it’s hard to recommend anything else
Mydejavooo that’s the better way if you want some bubble for effects. Some people want that bubble to make it obvious hydro mod. Looks cool also. I have on my 2 watch with and w/o bubble. Use syringe👍🏼😊👍🏼
Does the oil come out when u pull out the crown to change the time
It definitely does not, I will leave a link to a video where I compare it to a normal watch and I go through all the functions and you can see that there’s no leakage at all
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
It's the first I'm seeing this. What is the reason for doing this? Does it not ruin the watch in the long run??
Does the viscosity of the oil affect longer term time keeping accuracy?
Not that I’ve noticed. An argument can be made it may take the life of the battery down a few months. But is it the oil or the battery? As for the accuracy, I haven’t noticed a real change
@@allthingsrandom8137 that’s interesting. Thank u for thr reply. Yes, I later came across the battery life comment too. Interesting. It seems quite a deal breaker if it were only 10 months after all the hassle and rinse n repeat. But good experiment and also historical use for scuba. I’ll be trying it on my Patek for tomorrow’s dive.
Can you do this to an automatic homage watch? Like one of those homage Rolex with a Miyota 8015 movement ? Any thoughts 💭? Thanks 😊
I would not. The oil will slow the balance wheel and make it non-operational. Only for quartz!
@@allthingsrandom8137 batery life will decrease a lot if filled with oil?
NO!!!
So how did this hold up? Is it still in good working condition? When you pull out the crown no oil leakage?
No leaks and is still running good. I know I’ll have to changed the battery eventually, but it’s been going with no issues for over a year
@@allthingsrandom8137 thank you for your kind response.
Did it ruin the lume? What about battery connection did you lose power later?
Nope lume is fine so far. It’s been over a year and everything works as it did
It would be interesting to do it on a solar watch and see if the solar cells still recharge the battery. Also if the watch includes a small LCD display, can that LCD still be read?
Solar works fine. I did it with my buddies citizen. LCD screen is unaffected so it’s read fine
It improves LCD displays.
Why does the oil not interfere with the battery/electrical system of the watch?
Because the oil is a non-conductive oil. You can either use a ferrite oil or a silicone oil. All of which does not conduct electricity.
When you're adjusting the time does any oil leak from the Crown?
James Barrie I was going to ask the same question.
Yes.
@@psanto13 If it has a rubber gasket, no. If water doesn't get in, oil doesn't get out.
Here is the answer ruclips.net/video/sZkrjHINtU8/видео.html
@@rehakmate Water WILL get in when the crown is out for time adjustment. They always say always ensure the crown is secure before allowing the watch to get wet.
Wouldn't oil leak out when you pull out the crown to adjust the time?
Not at all. Check out this video. This is about 6 months later and I show how I adjust the time with no problem
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
The oil does not short out the battery or other electrical parts?
Nope, it’s non-conductive oil, perfectly ok for electrics
@@allthingsrandom8137 Thats amazing. Is all silicone oil non conductive ? (just wondering)
MetamorphicWonders silicone oil is non-conducive
Sooooo....what happens when you unscrew the crown to change the date?
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.htmlsi=Ei1ahcO2kjHrBstN
Nothing,
Does oil come out when you change the time?
Not at all. Check out this video. I show changing time and not leakage, plus why to oil fill for underwater usage
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
I've got a MT rolly GMT, I would be terrified to fill it with oil. But It does look great though, especially with that crystal. I think on the down side, youre going to have a messy battery change
To be far, as easy as the process was, if only once every two or three years? No biggie. I only wish I used the dive watch Instead of the one here
Please do not ever do this on a mechanical movement like a rolex PLEASE
@@melody3741 apart from the fact this in time will possibly destroy the quartz movement and the seals in this watch. This is not a technique for any mechanical watch, would love to see the hair spring on the balance operate, rotor and gear train operate if anyone did 😂🤣
@@a0r0a7 I have doubts a mechanical watch would even run at all once submerged in that oil.
Why do suppose this would ruin the gaskets though? Many rubber gaskets actually get improved longevity when regularly exposed to light oils.
@@Strideo1 Of course a mechanical watch would not run. A sticky hairspring because of oil on a balance will make a mechanical watch run super fast or not at all. As for the gaskets, depends on the oil used.
Seems like a bad idea. What's it like when temperature falls below room temperature?
It’s not olive oil…. Nothing. You could argue maybe -20 degrees. Anything above 30 degrees f, is fine
Can you do this with a water resistant watch (5atm)?
Better so with a water resistant watch. The next one is the dive version with a screw down crown
I'm confused. Is it a screw down crown? If not, oil doesn't come out?
It is not a screw down but offers 50 meters for water resistance. Here is a link where I show all the functions showing it does not leak
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
This can only be done to waterproof watches, correct?
Define water proof. Every watch has a level of waterproof resistance. My recommendation is 50 m and you’ll be fine.
Even if you choose a watch that is a timex for example with only 30 m of water resistance, it would still work
Would this work on automatic watches?
Negative
Can this be made to an automatic watch?
Nope, sorry. The oils will slow down the balance wheel too much
Any update to how this affected your watch long term? :)
I have changed the battery. Nothing other than maybe a shorter battery life. I have a Vaer dive watch in route, solar quartz, which I am reviewing then re-doing the oil filling video. It’s older and needs updating. But the solar is to make sure the battery never has to be changed.
Hello from Rio de Janeiro!
Nice video!
What about the lume?
New Man check out this ruclips.net/video/BSeZ3HKHoMA/видео.html. The last video is the original review of the watch with a Lume shot. Lume Doesn’t hangs with the oil.
Umm I gotta ask. Arent you going to have to redo this every time you change the battery? That kinda sucks.
Check one of the most recent videos I did, oil filling a vaer solar. So you don’t have too
well explained. thanks. I have an old quartz watch I'd love to do this to. It SAYS... "50M water resistant" on the back. I prised off the back to reveal it has no gasket. Although the fit it fairly tight. Can't yet findhow to remove the crown stem. Looked fore the little button - to no avail so far.
But here, the question. Is there any way to tell if it is sufficiently waterproof for this MOD, and wats to stop the oil leaking out of the crown stem movement?
Final quewstoin - is the process reversible. Once done, can it be cleanoed out wihtout fcu(king up the whole thing?
Thanks!
esotericist process is not reversible. Once oil touches everything that’s it. That’s why I bought a watch specifically for the mod. Honestly I would recommend a quartz diver. Most offer at least 100 meters of water resistance, and most have screw down crowns
@@allthingsrandom8137 all clear and thanks for your professonal advice/response.
What happens when you gotta change the battery??
Tommy Towe process is the same as filling the watch. Open up the back, yes it’s full of oil. Then take the battery out while leaving everything face down to avoid bubbles on the face. Submerge it back in oil and recase it
This is by far the best video on the topic. Great job! I am now determined to give it a try - will of course start with the Casio guinea pig :-) As the oil is bound to cause some resistance, even if it is 50 cSt, I am just really considering using 10 cSt (I have seen a post somewhere where the guy used 0.65 cSt oil - but they are so pricey!) instead of 50 cSt, that should decrease the resistance and hence keep batter life almost normal. Of course I'd be happy for you to try it first ;-)
On a different note, you haven't replaced the crystal, right? Is that domed like this from the factory? It really looks great.
No, everything on it was stock. I wanted to choose something that would give that awesome domed affect. So I looked for a long time at the mathey-tissot and decided just to say what the hell.
no want for free, too exposed and scratches too easily
Dumb question: What is the function of the 24 hour pepsi ring with no 24 hour hand?
You can technically time an additional time zone without a gmt function. The standard hour hand acts as the first time zone, the 24 hour bezel can then be adjusted to should an additional time zone either ahead or behind.
Look cool
Could you show me how to adjust the time and date while it's already filled with oil? Thanks.
Trianta Abadi The same as you would if it wasn’t filled with oil. The viscosity is thick enough to where it shouldn’t leak out when you adjust the time
Thanks budd!
@@allthingsrandom8137 nice. I was worried my cheapo watch will slow down and I couldn't adjust time after doing this
I am considering doing it myself but I am concerned about one thing--- when you unscrew the crown to change the date or something, will the oil leak?
Wotan Lau The one I used actually doesn’t have a screw down crown, it has a gasket around the crown stem, so it doesn’t matter if it’s pushed in or pulled out to change the date it’s still fine
I was asking myself the same question since 50m water resistance with a push-down crown is on the low end as a diver. Thanks for the question and answer
How messy is it to adjust the time tho? I imagine the oil sips out when you unscrew the crown
None at all. There is no leaking. There is an internal gasket that prevents it
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
This shows me adjusting the time
So, I did this last night to two watches and both failed. I used the exact oil you're using... any ideas why?
Failed in what ways?
@@allthingsrandom8137 Second hand no longer ticks. Just stuck in place. Tries to advance, but doesn't. Oil Filled a Casio Forester and a Timex Expedition. Any suggestions?
I am wondering that since both have illumination systems (Casio has a light and Timex has Indiglo) that could be playing into the issue? Both the light and the Indiglo still work, but they're no longer keeping time.
The oil shouldn’t have any effect on the second hand really. And it also shouldn’t effect the electronics. I’ve done it to more than one watch, but one was the Swiss and another was a citizen. Maybe try it on a more robust movement? Honestly I’ve watched it work on so many watches, you maybe the outlier.
@@allthingsrandom8137 After the first failed, I was like well, maybe that was just a fluke. And then when it happened again, I just thought I was doing something incorrectly. I have assembled and repaired many watches, so I didn't think it was an issue with technique. I may try a watch without an illumination feature and see how that turns out. I'll chime in with my results later this evening. :D
So, the reasoning on doing this it’s only for the looks? Any other improvements? Thank you!
Basically just looks, but it does increase the water resistance rating quite a bit. Water intrusion is basically impossible because it’s filled with oil which is far more dense
@@allthingsrandom8137 understood. Not for me though. Appreciate you sharing.
@@allthingsrandom8137 £50 buys me a Casio Duro waterproof to 200 metres. Few divers go much beyond 30 metres.
Looks good! Awesome work. Looking forward to more of your videos
Use Florunite oil not silicone oil. It is runnier than silicone plus silicone oil will turn everything yellow overtime including lume.
Thanks for the tip.
It would be interesting to see how deep the watch could go in a pressure test now it's oil-filled.
In theory, there is now no limit to how deep it can go as the oil doesn't compress like air does.
Behind the Press tested one. It surpass Vostok Amphibia, but the back case bent inwards and some oil leak out.
It was first designed for deep diving
The quartz crystal is in an aluminum can. That can will be crushed at depth.
I have seen test video of watches under water deeper then 940m for over 2 weeks!
I wonder if I can use refined coconut oil?
Has to be a non-conductive oil. As long as it is, and is electronics friendly
@@allthingsrandom8137 how to test if its non conductive? Is it if could not lit?
Can you please explain what is the purpose of filling a watch with oil? I’m not being negative I’m interested in knowing the benefits or purpose of such a reason. Thanks
It allows for better dial visibility at different angles and also underwater.
@@weasel9062 thanks for letting me know , I’ve not seen this before
What do you do when you have to change the battery?
Well, same as when you filled it up. What I’ve done, is completely submerge it, then take the case back off, put battery in, close it up. As long as everything stays submerged, there will be no air bubbles
@@allthingsrandom8137 is there another oil I can use? I can’t find the oils you use in the video.
Steve Kennedy MicroLubrol 200 Fluid Pure Silicone Oil Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) 50 centistokes (CST) Viscosity, 4oz Bottle www.amazon.com/dp/B00ZM36C98/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_K6ARVBTKRP2M535PFMAF
@@allthingsrandom8137 thanks
Great tutorial! THank you :) I'm thinking of doing this for my Casio F-91W
Sweet!
Lol
Did I miss something. You don't explain why you would do this. What is the benefit of doing this? Would this not cause a problem when you press the button - ie: a Casio?
It helps in a few ways, not only does it project the dial on the inside of the crystal, making it easier to read, underwater, and easier to read above water, but it also improves of water resistance rating of your watch
As the viscosity of the oil is heavier and more dense, it makes it so water can’t intrude into the case
And there is no leakage whenever you change the time or use a button.
@@allthingsrandom8137 Thank you for your reply Sir.
Why you didn't post no oil and oiled watch side to side in one photo??
I figured you would see the difference from the beginning and the end. Also referencing memory from the original review. The difference is pretty dramatic. I didn’t think I needed to split screen it
Excelente comentario desde Costa Rica un saludo
What’s the long term effect?
sol star what do you mean specifically? Right now the watch is running about plus four seconds a day, and it’s fairly consistent with that. The batteries been in it for over a year, and when it goes dead I’ll submerged in oil, open up the back again, and replace the battery. The process is so simple, yes it is messy, but if I only have to do it every few years I don’t really think it’s a big deal
sol star and if you’re asking if the oil affects the movement of the watch, it does not at all. But it may patina the Dial faster.
What case is this? 🥰
www.jomashop.com/mathey-tissot-watch-h900ar.html?&gclid=Cj0KCQjwpdqDBhCSARIsAEUJ0hMk1u7TgY9ffqMljdB6aqbW5CB_mOkPdq3sYlaFjOtierHfhp3VF9UaAvDnEALw_wcB
Well at least the parts will be well lubricated. LOL! I wonder if this can be done on a mechanical watch?
Please don't try this with a mechanical watch. It can be done, but only if the dial side and the movement side are completely closed off from one another, which is very often not the case.
Absolutely not
I think a really cool vid idea would be trying to build your own custom watch (not an homage) from parts on the internet. Would be awesome
I did this but it was still sort of an homage in a way because the dial was the big pilot style.
Vacume chamber ? Maybe get all bubbles out.
Just simply submerging it seemed to work. I got no bubbles
No but really do this?? I have a 1989 1999 5h26-7a19 seiko what's the benifit of this mod
The only benefit is that the dial distortion goes away in the image appears on the bottom portion of the crystal
The 24 hour bezel is a mistake sent by DIY and has no function without a 24 hour hand. Should have sent you a 12 hour or minute bezel.
That’s not necessarily true. An additional 24 hour hand, like a gmt Ads a third time zone, not a second. So using the 24 hour bezel, you can adjust a second time zone using the standard hour hand.
Looks good but I’d like to see it before and after on a timegrapher.
Is that a sapphire crystal?
Domed mineral
@@allthingsrandom8137 would this mod work with sapphire?
@@Pehr81 here is an oil filled Vaer with a flat sapphire that I did a few weeks ago
ruclips.net/video/AXBqFo3NJEs/видео.htmlsi=I-wzpQUU7QaYDqSG
hows it holding up?
Works well with no leaks
@@allthingsrandom8137 Hi, how is the dial looking these days? Is there anyway we can see an update that can go over the watch's state as is today? And thank you for this great content!
What's the point you can even pull the crown to adjust the watch ..
ruclips.net/video/1d5sj9B4e20/видео.html
All then way. It’s an internal gasket, so there’s no issue. Here’s a video where I actually just the time six months after it’s been filled
Thank you that's was what I'm wondering about 👍🏼
What about automatics
Can not fill automatics. It slows the balance wheel