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24 October 2018, 10:19 AM | #1 |
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Seeking some advice - 16750
Hi All,
First let me thank everyone in advance, tons of great info on here. I love watches but never really been a Rolex guy, but I know a bit about some other brands. Lurked on here forever, but never spoke up. I've had a damaged 16750 sitting in a drawer for years, honestly forgot about it until I saw a vintage sub on a guys wrist and really liked it. That caused me to get some sticker shock when I saw what vintage Subs where going for later that night when I went window shopping online. That got me thinking about the old GMT in a drawer... somewhere... Anyway, found it, it's actually not as bad as I seemed to remember it being. Opened it up, super clean and shiny in the movement, no hesitation in the gears. Closed it back and it keeps time near perfectly. -2 sec in 24hr. It has a scratched acrylic and cyclops, not sure if polywatch can help the cyclops. I can't upload pics otherwise I would show you what's wrong, but it needs a new crown/case tube. Hopefully looking to see what people say... Should I send it off to Rolex and get the whole 'shebang or find someone to fix the tube and maybe a new acrylic and call it good. |
24 October 2018, 09:17 PM | #2 |
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Most will wait to comment until pics are posted
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24 October 2018, 09:21 PM | #3 |
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Welcome to the forum
Since you’re in California, I’d send it of to Watchworks for an assessment. |
24 October 2018, 09:28 PM | #4 |
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In this day and age, I struggle to understand how people can't post a photo? So many different ways of doing so.
I mean who doesn't like literature guesswork.... |
25 October 2018, 03:03 AM | #5 |
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25 October 2018, 03:05 AM | #6 |
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25 October 2018, 03:06 AM | #7 |
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25 October 2018, 08:22 AM | #8 |
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25 October 2018, 11:05 AM | #9 |
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Ok So here it is in all it glory
[IMG]IMG_3347 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]IMG_3350 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] Inside looks great [IMG]IMG_3355 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]IMG_3354 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] Some dings and dents [IMG]IMG_3359 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]IMG_3352 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] And of course the broken tube [IMG]IMG_3351 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] |
25 October 2018, 12:47 PM | #10 |
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glad to see you got the pics uploaded.
A couple of comments: 1) good looking piece, might have been lightly polished in the past but the lugs look thick. This is a gloss dial variation (arguably later generation vs. the matte dial version of the 16750). 2) take the bracelet off and check the serial number and check the year of correspondence. 3) My view on the "stripped" crown is that the whole tube has come out. So it may be as simple as "screwing" the tube back in. I could be wrong but that's how i'm reading the pictures. 4) crystal just needs to be polished with polywatch. The cyclops will be hard to buff out without distortion though. |
25 October 2018, 01:15 PM | #11 |
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That's a good looking/well worn piece. I would send it off to RSC for the service, and it'll come back spanking new. Def tell them to not change the hands or the dial, those have patina'ed beautifully.
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25 October 2018, 02:04 PM | #12 |
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Looks very nice, and possibly unpolished, if the lug-holes are any guide. If it has been in a drawer for years, it's due for a service, so you can have the crown/tube issues addressed at the same time, and fitting a new crystal is probably easier than polishing that one, since some of the scratches look quite deep.
Personally, I would use a competent independent watchmaker instead of RSC, but that's just my bias. |
25 October 2018, 02:52 PM | #13 |
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Looks like a nice original example. You're on the right track to have it serviced/repaired. Find a competent watchmaker in your area and have the broken parts repaired and the watch serviced to include a new crystal. There is no reason to leave that old, worn-out crystal on there - it's in poor condition and probably has suffered some cracks along the lower edge after all these decades of use.
Keep the watch away from the Rolex Service Centers - they tend to have a propensity for replacing old parts with newer service parts that detracts from the watch and its value.
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Member of NAWCC since 1990. INSTAGRAM USER NAME: SPRINGERJFP Visit my Instagram page to view some of the finest vintage GMTs anywhere - as well as other vintage classics. |
25 October 2018, 04:30 PM | #14 | ||
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Quote:
Quote:
2)Serial checks out, mid 84 3)I believe that the threads for the crown broke off and are still in the crown. 4)That's what I figured, a new crystal will ensure water tightness as well. |
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25 October 2018, 04:33 PM | #15 |
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A few shots of the bracelet, honestly not much stretch, it's really still pretty tight, just scratched and swirled
[IMG]IMG_3364 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] IMG_3363 by micah ulrick, on Flickr [IMG]IMG_3362 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] [IMG]IMG_3361 by micah ulrick, on Flickr[/IMG] |
26 October 2018, 10:17 AM | #16 |
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I have no first hand experience with an RSC, but it might be worth a call to an RSC to understand what they can or will do, especially with respect to not polishing it, a new acrylic is probably all you want on that beauty.
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