I just polished my bracelet on my Rolex Bluesy and it came out just beautiful and new looking in just few minutes. My 9 month old Rolex Bluesy is the 2-tone Submariner with the 18k gold and Oystersteel and Oyster bracelet. After having it on my wrist for 9 straight months it of course got scratches and started not to look so great. All I used were just 2 items that I already had at home: 1 - A bottle of Brasso cleaner/polisher, it is the beige creamy compound. 2 - Scotch Brite blue non-scratch kitchen scrub sponge. I used the coarser side to polish. After soft polishing I washed my Rolex with a toothbrush and Dawn dish-washing detergent. I made sure the crown was properly screwed. After washing and cleaning my Rolex and then drying it with a soft cloth it looked like new again. Try my method....you will be very pleased.
I commend your enthusiasm for restoring your Rolex Bluesy to its former shine! However, polishing a Rolex at home with Brasso and a Scotch-Brite sponge is not recommended by Rolex or professional watchmakers. Here's why: * Abrasive materials: Brasso and Scotch-Brite can remove more material than intended, affecting the watch's finish and potentially compromising its water resistance. * Uneven polishing: Achieving a polished finish uniformly at home is challenging, and improper technique can lead to inconsistencies. * Vintage value reduction: For vintage Rolex watches, even minor polishing can significantly decrease their collectibility and value. For these reasons, it's generally recommended to leave Rolex polishing to authorized service centers. They use specialized tools and techniques to ensure a proper polish that maintains the value and integrity of your watch. Thanks for comments.
@@SolimBD Thanks for your good advise. Next time I will give my Rolex to my good old friend who is an authorized Rolex technician and an unbelievable expert, the difficulty is he lives in another state. I should be patient and wait till I visit him again. My scratches were quite minor and I used a very light touch, so I hope I did not do any permanent harm.
amazing video but please dotn wear gloves with rotating machines. had a buddy loose his arm when his glove got pulled into a lathe and it tore it clean off at the elbow. this isn't that powerful but will easily break every bone in your hand. on some equipment it may even suck your entire body in so please be careful.
you don't know how to do this job. you can't do this job. the speed of the motor cleaner, when polishing, must be at maximum speed, unlike when satining. when you polish you shouldn't use those gloves, you have no sensitivity on the piece. the result you obtained is not good, you can see a lot of "orange peel" on the shiny part.
I just polished my bracelet on my Rolex Bluesy and it came out just beautiful and new looking in just few minutes.
My 9 month old Rolex Bluesy is the 2-tone Submariner with the 18k gold and Oystersteel and Oyster bracelet.
After having it on my wrist for 9 straight months it of course got scratches and started not to look so great.
All I used were just 2 items that I already had at home:
1 - A bottle of Brasso cleaner/polisher, it is the beige creamy compound.
2 - Scotch Brite blue non-scratch kitchen scrub sponge. I used the coarser side to polish.
After soft polishing I washed my Rolex with a toothbrush and Dawn dish-washing detergent. I made sure the crown was properly screwed.
After washing and cleaning my Rolex and then drying it with a soft cloth it looked like new again.
Try my method....you will be very pleased.
I commend your enthusiasm for restoring your Rolex Bluesy to its former shine! However, polishing a Rolex at home with Brasso and a Scotch-Brite sponge is not recommended by Rolex or professional watchmakers. Here's why:
* Abrasive materials: Brasso and Scotch-Brite can remove more material than intended, affecting the watch's finish and potentially compromising its water resistance.
* Uneven polishing: Achieving a polished finish uniformly at home is challenging, and improper technique can lead to inconsistencies.
* Vintage value reduction: For vintage Rolex watches, even minor polishing can significantly decrease their collectibility and value.
For these reasons, it's generally recommended to leave Rolex polishing to authorized service centers. They use specialized tools and techniques to ensure a proper polish that maintains the value and integrity of your watch.
Thanks for comments.
@@SolimBD Thanks for your good advise. Next time I will give my Rolex to my good old friend who is an authorized Rolex technician and an unbelievable expert, the difficulty is he lives in another state. I should be patient and wait till I visit him again.
My scratches were quite minor and I used a very light touch, so I hope I did not do any permanent harm.
Hi what do you call the polisher that you use in 3:30?
Hand made tool, Wood with Silicon carbide paper for finishing
Very nice! What do you use for the Matt finish
Artifex SC 46 MP is the Rolex Brushing
insanely bad done
can you indicate all your materials and machine that u use? thank u
amazing video but please dotn wear gloves with rotating machines. had a buddy loose his arm when his glove got pulled into a lathe and it tore it clean off at the elbow. this isn't that powerful but will easily break every bone in your hand. on some equipment it may even suck your entire body in so please be careful.
Thanks for advice ♥️
🙏👍👍👍
you don't know how to do this job.
you can't do this job.
the speed of the motor cleaner, when polishing, must be at maximum speed, unlike when satining. when you polish you shouldn't use those gloves, you have no sensitivity on the piece.
the result you obtained is not good, you can see a lot of "orange peel" on the shiny part.
Thanks for voluble comments
، ❤️🇮🇶🌹