5 minutes in I realized there's no way I'm going to risk cleaning my old Rado. Still watched the rest because it's always a pleasure to watch someone who's passionate about their art.
I'm new to entry level watch collecting, including minor maintenance tasks. This video has given me essential information, not only on dial construction and how to recognise individual problems, but also which watches to buy and which to avoid. Thankyou so much for such valuable information.
I have a vintage Navitimer with some discolouration to the dial...after watching this helpful video I am now under no illusions that attempting any sort of cleaning whatsoever will result in an improvement and I am quite happy to let the patina remain exactly as it is now...I suspect it is mainly caused by the lume that has flaked from one of the numerals and from the hands. When I first spoke to Breitling I mentioned possible moisture ingress and they said if necessary they can replace the dial...gulp...please NOOOOOOOOOO! I do not want a new dial, I want to retain the original dial with its patination. Having researched more about vintage watches I am now of the opinion that it is more likely the flaked lume rather than moisture that has burned and discoloured the dial. A thorough cleaning and lubrication of the movement is all that I will request. Thank heavens for people sharing their expertise with us on youtube. Kalle, hartelijk bedankt!
I have found that the gentlest way that is helpful, and that hasn't ruined any dials for me, is to let the dial sit in 100-105 degree F water for not more than 5 minutes, then use a Q-tip on the dial with very light pressure (but not only rolling it, as Kalle suggests). Always good to test on edge of dial first. Dial must be fully dried of course after cleaning this way, or new problems would be introduced. Cleaning in this manner, sometimes doing several times on a dial, dirt is removed from the varnish layer and the result is often a notably brighter-looking dial. Never try alcohol on a dial - that can dissolve varnish and paint both. If you were anxious about letting the dial soak in the warm water, you can simply try the warm water on the Q-tip without the soaking of the dial, that way is even gentler. I've not tried the Polident in the water method yet. This is a really important area of concern to those trying to restore or fix up old watches, since we often can fix watches to make them mechanically sound but then are stuck with the poor appearance of a dial, and I hope that Kalle can do further research for us on things to try.
just a thought but using normal tap water will dry leaving salts, minerals. Ionised or distilled water might better ? i dont know but someone comment on diffrence between ionised and distilled water )
Cleaning a simply dirty dial that has no underlying damage should be easy using your method. But folks need to understand your advice is specifically/only for cleaning dirt off of watch dials. Like Kalle says, many issues are not treatable.
I’d only ever dry clean, with rodico. It’s really not worth introducing moisture as it can get trapped under the varnish and tarnish the silvering. This is what causes black splotches around the edges and pinked dials. And the worst part is if you do slip some moisture against the silver you won’t know until years later after it tarnished. Water, baking all that other stuff, bad idea.
DI or distilled water is my first pass. That removes ionic salts, that will accelerate corrosion if left in place, as well as loose dirt. After that it's spot-cleaning. I had to resort to acetone on the gold-plated numerals of my "new" watch. That was for watch crystal adhesive on the surface that's been there for maybe 70 years. That's where magnification is key. One slip and it's game-over for the finish.
@@eded8045 I believe water cleaned through deionization (DI) is the cleanest. That's what is often used in a lab. Distilled should have low enough ionic contaminates for a watch.
Thanks! You made a grate video. You pointed out the mindset you need to have to approach a vintage watch. I will start with an old 78 turn mechanical record player and after that start with some scrap watches. My goal is to continue the service on my vintage omega 63isch. My favorite retired clock mechanic is close to shut down.
Your video was super informative about dials in general I put my first watch together with parts from ebay and aliexpress, i have a small cheap cnc mill and im thinking of making watch dials in it, skeleton dials... i cant find any that i like so its time to make
Many thanks Kalle, really useful! I have found a microscope a must! I use just distilled water, really gentle like you say. I have polished indices a bit with a suede if they are gold. So far so good, but less is best! Ta.
My dear old dad used to have a saying in our repair workshop " if you don't want to have to try removing a mark off a dial, don't put it on there in the first place" In other words take special care and protect your watch dials from potential accidents.
This is great! I ruined a dial before because I thought everything could be cleaned easily using IPA. I quickly found like that the dial paint itself was removed! I wished I had come across your video before. BTW, can u pls teach us how to put a modern movement into an old watch? Especially how to mark the dial feet position of the new movement onto the dial so that new dial feet can be installed. Thx!
I put the porcelain pocket watch dials in the ultrasound machine for 30 seconds or so to bounce the dirt out of the hairline cracks. Once the dirt is out, they are very hard to see. Try it on a test dial. Works great.. but only on those type of dial.
so much info and an education. Thanks!! BTW perhaps a follow up on indexes, minute, hour hands cleaning and corrosion removal tips, tricks would be fantastic. Im sure many thumbs up for my proposal from viewers for you to make the video.
A very good video. Try saliva for cleaning organic stains. It is natures organic solvent. Sounds gross but it does work in many situations. It's full of enzymes designed for dissolving many things. Use a Q-Tip or cotton bud to roll over the stains.
I learnt early to leave dials alone and instead to value the beauty in imperfection. Wabi Sabi, as the Japanese would say. I destroyed too many dials with even quite respectful attempts at cleaning. There’s beauty in imperfection, but ruined dials look so sad.
Wabi sabi is the best option IMHO adding character and history to the watch dial. Same goes for overpolishing of the case, making me think of plastic surgery very often gone terribly wrong. Some watch brands nowadays are making like stonewashed dials (eg CW)
If you have a poor refinished dial.. if it can be redone say make it correct.. I’m in the middle of that horrible Process.. hard to find someone to do it
Thank you very much, information of great help, I could explain that a simple mortal can do with a sphere to which one or worse fell the two guides that keep it attached to the movement, I know that there is the possibility of a weld and that those pins can be bought, but that we can do those who do not have access to any of these opctions. Thank you
I've seen a watchmaker use denture cleaning tablets to clean enameled dials. Not sure about the efficacy of this technique but his results appeared good.
I wish I had seen this last week, I used a bit of IPA about 50% and it kinda dissolved the varnish, it left a “milky” spot. I would have preferred to leave the stain there. Thanks!!
Always give your watchmaker specific instructions regarding the watch dial when getting a vintage watch serviced. Discuss it with them so no surprises.
Difficult subject yes yes yes. I have tried to clean many dials, some has become worse, but I have learned to be careful so usually I get some kind of result. If it's loss of varnish I have had luck with gentle cleaning making sure not to remove the print, then I carefully spray the dial with hairspray, L'Oreal from my wife! It gives a matt finish and can often hide differences in the appearance of the varnish giving a much more uniform look. Of course I do this only on dials that is really ruined already... Usually I just use rodico to get rid of particles of dust and leave it at that.
Vintage look is how the patina is. Took 50 years to make it like it is. Remove lint or dust but accept the flaws as part of the watch character. A complete restoration, polished case or re-plating, new hands new crystal then a new replacement dial is the way to go. The old vintage look, but the movement has had a thorough clean and lubrication, new main spring and brought back to as close as new running condition is the best result for old watches.
well put - that is exactly the conclusion that I have arrived at and this video just sealed the deal for me regarding servicing a vintage watch with some discolouration to the dial!
If you simply MUST have a lean dial in your vintage watch, I recommend having your watchmaker send the dial out for professional refinishing, Understand that this destroys the collector value of your watch, but if the value is sufficiently detracted by a nasty dial anyway, this may still be worth it to you. The refinished dial may or may not be done well, also. I've had some come back gorgeous, and I've sent several back because of printing mistakes or other issues. Mae sure you have a good "before" photo of the dial if you choose this route. I long ago decided that I was the only collector I needed to please, so I've have some vintage Omega watches with nasty, nasty dials sent out for refinishing, and eventually, they all were much better looking - to ME - than if I had left them with the corrosion and ugliness. Choose carefully if you go this route.
The copper oxide or patina (the green surface of exposed copper) I remember we would make a solution of like Tabasco sauce and vinegar (or something similar) and just spray it on to copper roofs with a pump sprayer and wait a few minutes, then wash it off with a hose. What was left was like a shiny new copper coin. Some sort of mild acid of pretty much any type will do the trick. Maybe a vinegar based glass cleaner might work for the pocket watch dial hairline cracks?
Use denture cleaning tablets for enamel dials. It will blow your mind. It often will make cracks seemingly vanish. Just leave the dial in the water with the tablet overnight.
Thank you so much for instructions. I have a dial that I want to clean….due to dust and debris, but I think I will leave it alone or reach out to a professional.
I use hair salon grade poroxide on pretty much anything with stains including,porcelain,antique prints you name, cand 50 volume and even a 100. But use golves will turn finger tips white
Watching this vid because I already ruined my vintage citizen watch dial a while ago 😫 i accidentally dipped my Q-Tips on isopropyl alcohol instead of water 😫😓 how to remove varnish coating? Can i use automotive lacquer finish coating as an alternative? Pardon my english
Very interesting, however, have ever replaced a dial with guilloche custom dial. I saw in one of your videos. I think that would be great . That's just me. I'm fascinated with that machine, so much so, I was thinking of making a small rose engine lathe. I'm a tool and die maker, as I mention in one of the comments.
Interesting. I have an old seiko. The dial has a sort of a thin transparency on it that is "bubbly" and I wish I could clean up its appearance. I'm not sure if it's varnish. Would you possibly have any suggestions about this, or where I could view some instruction on it? Of course I'd be afraid of getting too aggressive with it. Thanks.
This was very insightful. Such a difficult subject. What's the...is there a "grade" for watch dials? What damage should be "fixed" that will remain vintage? What repair/cleaning, while successful (all print remains) is acceptable for a vintage watch? I understand the grading system for collecting or selling comics but now I'm curious about if there's a grading system for watches that I, a hobbyist watchmaker, should be paying attention to since my goal is to repair pocket watches to preserve them as pieces of history. Should I even clean a dial if that removes it from being identifiable as vintage? I am intrigued!
the NAWCC in the states suggestion box recommends Denture Cleaning tablets for the glass/porcelain type old fashioned pocket watches, whats your comment on that?
I've heard that some old watchmakers use cyanide to clean the surfaces, but it has to be cleaned thoroughly or it will turn red when it dries out. I usually use bell oil, sometimes a water-based dissolver for models, or diluted Silver wash water, these are high-risk actions, but sometimes have unexpected results.
nice video as usual. Curious to know why you didn t mention water. Sometimes you get excellent results on cleaning stains just with care and some water...
What about a new watch? I found a spot (maybe two), that seem to be little droplets (spittle?). It's still under warranty. But I don't really want to send it back right now. I'd rather wait until closer to the end of the warranty (1.5y from now). The watch is otherwise spotless, I mostly wear it indoors, so I don't want to risk any little scratch. What do you think?
I'm not a watchmaker but I know how to clean things without damaging them. Soaking a watch dial in Simple Green then cleaning it with a wet Q tip while submerged should do the job nicely. It's biodegradable detergent so it won't remove paint and ink, just dirt grease and oil.
Index kali we call them batons some are glued pin and also riveted on dial as you refer iffy to clean ie human spit with finger is what I was advised to do careful operation
Kalle, great video on an often neglected topic. Would be interesting to get some expert advice on how to recognise a redial on a vintage watch. For instance: how pristine can a dial be from the 70-ies?
A good indication is the condition of the rest of the watch, if it’s been polished and if there’s are other interventions, new hands maybe. Though i’ve also restored watched with water ingress and prefect dials, which I knew for a fact were original.
The vintage Bulova rose gold dial didn't age well. I have one that is very dark but looks clean. With the dark blue hands, its hard to see. Can these be brightened up or go with a different color dial. I have an old NOS bulova that the rose gold dial is beautiful so I know it's not just time/patina, maybe humidity? All else fails, I'm considering painting a dial rose pink since I have never seen a pink dial on these old watches. Any advice?
Have you ever used peroxide and UV light to remove yellowing and stains on a metal dial with no varnish layer ? Is the printing at risk ? Maybe just avoid printed areas ? Thanks
Generally speaking, I think the best way to clean a vintage watch dial is to not do it at all. Of course, there are some whose patination isn’t as attractive as others may be and, therefore, need some work. But patina is everything to me. I love the character it imparts of a long, storied life with inevitable ups and downs.
5 minutes in I realized there's no way I'm going to risk cleaning my old Rado.
Still watched the rest because it's always a pleasure to watch someone who's passionate about their art.
It is amazing that you share such content on a matter that requires very high expertise completely free on UA-cam. Thank you so much.
Not many people notice Citizen but they have some of the best dials ever. Thank you for this Kalle, knowledge that can't be found anywhere 🙏
superb video, very educational!
I wish I had teachers like you!
Sir,You are imparting such a large volume of Knowledge Here! youre Knowledge,sir is priceless! I. am sure we can't thank you Enough!
I learned the hard way not to clean the dials. when you delete one or two, you learn from disgust. Thanks for the video Kalle. Its a great lesson.
never expected there to be so much detail on this subject! Thanks so much.
Thank you so much for taking the time to explain all this.
I'm new to entry level watch collecting, including minor maintenance tasks. This video has given me essential information, not only on dial construction and how to recognise individual problems, but also which watches to buy and which to avoid. Thankyou so much for such valuable information.
I have a vintage Navitimer with some discolouration to the dial...after watching this helpful video I am now under no illusions that attempting any sort of cleaning whatsoever will result in an improvement and I am quite happy to let the patina remain exactly as it is now...I suspect it is mainly caused by the lume that has flaked from one of the numerals and from the hands. When I first spoke to Breitling I mentioned possible moisture ingress and they said if necessary they can replace the dial...gulp...please NOOOOOOOOOO! I do not want a new dial, I want to retain the original dial with its patination. Having researched more about vintage watches I am now of the opinion that it is more likely the flaked lume rather than moisture that has burned and discoloured the dial. A thorough cleaning and lubrication of the movement is all that I will request.
Thank heavens for people sharing their expertise with us on youtube. Kalle, hartelijk bedankt!
You are very smart
This video is a masterpiece! Theory and practice go hand on hand! I suggest a continuation on repair enamel dials.
I have found that the gentlest way that is helpful, and that hasn't ruined any dials for me, is to let the dial sit in 100-105 degree F water for not more than 5 minutes, then use a Q-tip on the dial with very light pressure (but not only rolling it, as Kalle suggests). Always good to test on edge of dial first. Dial must be fully dried of course after cleaning this way, or new problems would be introduced. Cleaning in this manner, sometimes doing several times on a dial, dirt is removed from the varnish layer and the result is often a notably brighter-looking dial. Never try alcohol on a dial - that can dissolve varnish and paint both. If you were anxious about letting the dial soak in the warm water, you can simply try the warm water on the Q-tip without the soaking of the dial, that way is even gentler. I've not tried the Polident in the water method yet. This is a really important area of concern to those trying to restore or fix up old watches, since we often can fix watches to make them mechanically sound but then are stuck with the poor appearance of a dial, and I hope that Kalle can do further research for us on things to try.
just a thought but using normal tap water will dry leaving salts, minerals. Ionised or distilled water might better ? i dont know but someone comment on diffrence between ionised and distilled water )
Cleaning a simply dirty dial that has no underlying damage should be easy using your method. But folks need to understand your advice is specifically/only for cleaning dirt off of watch dials. Like Kalle says, many issues are not treatable.
I’d only ever dry clean, with rodico. It’s really not worth introducing moisture as it can get trapped under the varnish and tarnish the silvering. This is what causes black splotches around the edges and pinked dials. And the worst part is if you do slip some moisture against the silver you won’t know until years later after it tarnished. Water, baking all that other stuff, bad idea.
DI or distilled water is my first pass. That removes ionic salts, that will accelerate corrosion if left in place, as well as loose dirt. After that it's spot-cleaning. I had to resort to acetone on the gold-plated numerals of my "new" watch. That was for watch crystal adhesive on the surface that's been there for maybe 70 years. That's where magnification is key. One slip and it's game-over for the finish.
@@eded8045 I believe water cleaned through deionization (DI) is the cleanest. That's what is often used in a lab. Distilled should have low enough ionic contaminates for a watch.
Thanks! You made a grate video. You pointed out the mindset you need to have to approach a vintage watch. I will start with an old 78 turn mechanical record player and after that start with some scrap watches. My goal is to continue the service on my vintage omega 63isch. My favorite retired clock mechanic is close to shut down.
Your video was super informative about dials in general
I put my first watch together with parts from ebay and aliexpress, i have a small cheap cnc mill and im thinking of making watch dials in it, skeleton dials... i cant find any that i like so its time to make
Excellent .. thank you for your narrative, really helpful.
This is a very important lesson thank you from all my heart ❤
Very interesting and very well explained. Thanks for this video
Many thanks Kalle, really useful! I have found a microscope a must! I use just distilled water, really gentle like you say. I have polished indices a bit with a suede if they are gold. So far so good, but less is best! Ta.
I use car wax. Megairs. I love it it can take stains off and protects the varnish
That can help arrest further corrosion/oxidation too.
My dear old dad used to have a saying in our repair workshop " if you don't want to have to try removing a mark off a dial, don't put it on there in the first place"
In other words take special care and protect your watch dials from potential accidents.
Sounds like a wise man.
This is great! I ruined a dial before because I thought everything could be cleaned easily using IPA. I quickly found like that the dial paint itself was removed! I wished I had come across your video before.
BTW, can u pls teach us how to put a modern movement into an old watch? Especially how to mark the dial feet position of the new movement onto the dial so that new dial feet can be installed. Thx!
Great information. No doubt. AND... above this....your demeanor is very much appreciated. And hopefully contagious. Subscribed...thanks again.
I put the porcelain pocket watch dials in the ultrasound machine for 30 seconds or so to bounce the dirt out of the hairline cracks. Once the dirt is out, they are very hard to see. Try it on a test dial. Works great.. but only on those type of dial.
so much info and an education. Thanks!! BTW perhaps a follow up on indexes, minute, hour hands cleaning and corrosion removal tips, tricks would be fantastic. Im sure many thumbs up for my proposal from viewers for you to make the video.
A very good video. Try saliva for cleaning organic stains. It is natures organic solvent. Sounds gross but it does work in many situations. It's full of enzymes designed for dissolving many things. Use a Q-Tip or cotton bud to roll over the stains.
I am a bit wiser now and will view a watch dial in a different way. Thanks
I learnt early to leave dials alone and instead to value the beauty in imperfection. Wabi Sabi, as the Japanese would say. I destroyed too many dials with even quite respectful attempts at cleaning. There’s beauty in imperfection, but ruined dials look so sad.
Wabi sabi is the best option IMHO adding character and history to the watch dial. Same goes for overpolishing of the case, making me think of plastic surgery very often gone terribly wrong. Some watch brands nowadays are making like stonewashed dials (eg CW)
Bullsho Shitto. As the Irish would say.
If you have a poor refinished dial.. if it can be redone say make it correct.. I’m in the middle of that horrible
Process.. hard to find someone to do it
Then why are you here
I respect your feelings but I hate dirty watch dials and beat up crystals.
Another great lesson Kalle! Thanks.
Watch dials are obviously more delicate than they look. I never would have guessed that it would be so difficult to clean one.
Thank you very much, information of great help, I could explain that a simple mortal can do with a sphere to which one or worse fell the two guides that keep it attached to the movement, I know that there is the possibility of a weld and that those pins can be bought, but that we can do those who do not have access to any of these opctions. Thank you
Thank you ! I wish it was more straight to the point - you could do two separate videos with dials types and how to clean them !
On citizen dial or any dial what yellow adhesive used to glue marks or indexes??
Such a wealth of knowledge, and greatly appreciated; "thank you"! Enjoyed the vedio.
Best advice ever.. "If you have a chance, just don't "
Or pass it to Kalle..
Hi Kalle. Great video. Consider adding a smoke sponge to your cleaning kit. Used by paper conservators for cleaning delicate surfaces. M
I've seen a watchmaker use denture cleaning tablets to clean enameled dials. Not sure about the efficacy of this technique but his results appeared good.
Your dutch accent reminds me of relatives in Grand Rapids when I was a child growing up.
Very good informative video. Thanks
Best work for me is oil base 0.5 micron diamond paste , used to polish gem stones. 👍
Thank you so much! It was very informative.
Watching the index go made me sad! Thank you for sharing this
4:30 I quit cleaning dials and simply replace them with your stylish model types. Countless possibilities🤩
Excellent great info. Thank you for the efforts to inform, it is appreciated.
Oh finally an expert gives their take on this.
Very interesting, as are all of your videos. Thank you.
On my old enamel dials i use a "effervescent Denture cleaner" (the tablets you soak your dentures in over night.) I just follow the instructions.
Great tips. Human saliva is also a really good enzyme for cleaning.
Great and helpful video, thank you!
I’m enjoying your personality and your knowledge base is amazing thanks
Many tears ago I had a place I could send a dial to that refurbished them. They came back looking like new.
Thank you so much for this knowledge.
Very informative video sir thank you 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Great video and advice. 👏👏
Thanks Kalle!
I wish I had seen this last week, I used a bit of IPA about 50% and it kinda dissolved the varnish, it left a “milky” spot. I would have preferred to leave the stain there.
Thanks!!
dont worry i used rodico blue on a black sub dail and left traces (
Always give your watchmaker specific instructions regarding the watch dial when getting a vintage watch serviced. Discuss it with them so no surprises.
This is the same (excellent) advice that I was given regarding sending a fine old Navitimer off for a service with Breitling
Very helpful. You may have prevented me from doing something really stupid to my vintage Omega.
Thank you Kalle for stressing the point That a complete over haul,New dial new hands and polished case( Nooooo) is not necessarily the way to go!
Good Video a subject every watchmakers hate-I never make dial promises-just dust or light clean-Dial restorers have gotten rare and VERY Expensive
Great, very useful info. Thank you for sharing
I have used denture tabs on white enamel and white porcelain pocket watch dials..... 2 tabs for approx 3 minutes....
Difficult subject yes yes yes. I have tried to clean many dials, some has become worse, but I have learned to be careful so usually I get some kind of result. If it's loss of varnish I have had luck with gentle cleaning making sure not to remove the print, then I carefully spray the dial with hairspray, L'Oreal from my wife! It gives a matt finish and can often hide differences in the appearance of the varnish giving a much more uniform look. Of course I do this only on dials that is really ruined already... Usually I just use rodico to get rid of particles of dust and leave it at that.
What Loreal hairspray is that could you tell me please
Vintage look is how the patina is. Took 50 years to make it like it is. Remove lint or dust but accept the flaws as part of the watch character. A complete restoration, polished case or re-plating, new hands new crystal then a new replacement dial is the way to go. The old vintage look, but the movement has had a thorough clean and lubrication, new main spring and brought back to as close as new running condition is the best result for old watches.
well put - that is exactly the conclusion that I have arrived at and this video just sealed the deal for me regarding servicing a vintage watch with some discolouration to the dial!
Great vid. Love them. Keep it up!
Good morning Kelly and all
Greetings from Australia
John
Very informative 😃
Great lesson !!!
Hi Kalle, do have any videos showing the careful removal of scratches on the dial face? Thank you
If you simply MUST have a lean dial in your vintage watch, I recommend having your watchmaker send the dial out for professional refinishing, Understand that this destroys the collector value of your watch, but if the value is sufficiently detracted by a nasty dial anyway, this may still be worth it to you. The refinished dial may or may not be done well, also. I've had some come back gorgeous, and I've sent several back because of printing mistakes or other issues. Mae sure you have a good "before" photo of the dial if you choose this route. I long ago decided that I was the only collector I needed to please, so I've have some vintage Omega watches with nasty, nasty dials sent out for refinishing, and eventually, they all were much better looking - to ME - than if I had left them with the corrosion and ugliness. Choose carefully if you go this route.
The copper oxide or patina (the green surface of exposed copper) I remember we would make a solution of like Tabasco sauce and vinegar (or something similar) and just spray it on to copper roofs with a pump sprayer and wait a few minutes, then wash it off with a hose. What was left was like a shiny new copper coin. Some sort of mild acid of pretty much any type will do the trick. Maybe a vinegar based glass cleaner might work for the pocket watch dial hairline cracks?
Use denture cleaning tablets for enamel dials. It will blow your mind. It often will make cracks seemingly vanish. Just leave the dial in the water with the tablet overnight.
such a great video.
Thank you so much for instructions. I have a dial that I want to clean….due to dust and debris, but I think I will leave it alone or reach out to a professional.
So I’ve cleaned my dial with mild dawn dish soap and deionized water by rolling a Q-tip across. Worked quite well.
I use hair salon grade poroxide on pretty much anything with stains including,porcelain,antique prints you name, cand 50 volume and even a 100. But use golves will turn finger tips white
Amazing!!! Thanks a lot!
Thanks for your tips :)
Watching this vid because I already ruined my vintage citizen watch dial a while ago 😫 i accidentally dipped my Q-Tips on isopropyl alcohol instead of water 😫😓 how to remove varnish coating? Can i use automotive lacquer finish coating as an alternative? Pardon my english
Hi, can you point me to the location were i can source these qtips with sillicone on the front to remove dust speckles without leaving marks.
I'm looking for them too. Please give us a pointer or proper name for this product.
Very interesting, however, have ever replaced a dial with guilloche custom dial.
I saw in one of your videos.
I think that would be great .
That's just me.
I'm fascinated with that machine, so much so, I was thinking of making a small rose engine lathe.
I'm a tool and die maker, as I mention in one of the comments.
Interesting. I have an old seiko. The dial has a sort of a thin transparency on it that is "bubbly" and I wish I could clean up its appearance. I'm not sure if it's varnish. Would you possibly have any suggestions about this, or where I could view some instruction on it? Of course I'd be afraid of getting too aggressive with it. Thanks.
Asking what you feel about repainting and re finishing the case vs keeping an old watch original vintage?
good!!!👍👍👍
ua-cam.com/video/9cA2cvO6mrI/v-deo.html
Thanks man! Your video was useful for me)
Hi from Ukraine 🌍
Nice to hear from you Bogdan, our thoughts are with you and your country. Today we are welcoming your president in our country. All the best! 🍀
Hi, is it possible to drop the dial into ultrasonic cleaner?
This was very insightful. Such a difficult subject. What's the...is there a "grade" for watch dials? What damage should be "fixed" that will remain vintage? What repair/cleaning, while successful (all print remains) is acceptable for a vintage watch? I understand the grading system for collecting or selling comics but now I'm curious about if there's a grading system for watches that I, a hobbyist watchmaker, should be paying attention to since my goal is to repair pocket watches to preserve them as pieces of history. Should I even clean a dial if that removes it from being identifiable as vintage? I am intrigued!
the NAWCC in the states suggestion box recommends Denture Cleaning tablets for the glass/porcelain type old fashioned pocket watches, whats your comment on that?
I've heard that some old watchmakers use cyanide to clean the surfaces, but it has to be cleaned thoroughly or it will turn red when it dries out.
I usually use bell oil, sometimes a water-based dissolver for models, or diluted Silver wash water, these are high-risk actions, but sometimes have unexpected results.
Sungguh, pelajaran yang sangat berharga didasari dengan kejujuran yang luar biasa
nice video as usual. Curious to know why you didn t mention water. Sometimes you get excellent results on cleaning stains just with care and some water...
We got better results non water based, but yeah why not. Absolutely worth a try. Thnx!
Thanks for this excellent video! I'm curious what you placed your dial on during this video?
A bit of Pithwood I belive
What about a new watch? I found a spot (maybe two), that seem to be little droplets (spittle?). It's still under warranty. But I don't really want to send it back right now. I'd rather wait until closer to the end of the warranty (1.5y from now). The watch is otherwise spotless, I mostly wear it indoors, so I don't want to risk any little scratch. What do you think?
I'm not a watchmaker but I know how to clean things without damaging them. Soaking a watch dial in Simple Green then cleaning it with a wet Q tip while submerged should do the job nicely. It's biodegradable detergent so it won't remove paint and ink, just dirt grease and oil.
Index kali we call them batons some are glued pin and also riveted on dial as you refer iffy to clean ie human spit with finger is what I was advised to do careful operation
I’m curious can you repair scratches on dial?
Very tricky, we don’t.
18:40 What magnification do you need here? Would 40X be enough, in your opinion?
Kalle, great video on an often neglected topic. Would be interesting to get some expert advice on how to recognise a redial on a vintage watch. For instance: how pristine can a dial be from the 70-ies?
A good indication is the condition of the rest of the watch, if it’s been polished and if there’s are other interventions, new hands maybe. Though i’ve also restored watched with water ingress and prefect dials, which I knew for a fact were original.
Rather than cleaning a badly damaged dial, wouldn't it be better to try to find an OEM replacement dial, or take a dial from another identical watch?
The vintage Bulova rose gold dial didn't age well. I have one that is very dark but looks clean. With the dark blue hands, its hard to see. Can these be brightened up or go with a different color dial. I have an old NOS bulova that the rose gold dial is beautiful so I know it's not just time/patina, maybe humidity? All else fails, I'm considering painting a dial rose pink since I have never seen a pink dial on these old watches. Any advice?
Have you ever used peroxide and UV light to remove yellowing and stains on a metal dial with no varnish layer ? Is the printing at risk ? Maybe just avoid printed areas ? Thanks
Generally speaking, I think the best way to clean a vintage watch dial is to not do it at all. Of course, there are some whose patination isn’t as attractive as others may be and, therefore, need some work. But patina is everything to me. I love the character it imparts of a long, storied life with inevitable ups and downs.