Call Paul Duggan's in Boston (sometimes in Chelmsford)
His watch service guy, Jack does good work. They will likely recommend a complete cleaning and service. Expect Boston prices (~$400-$500).
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Any GMT watch can be used to point North. If the 12-hour hand is set to the same time zone as the 24-hour hand, lay the watch flat and point the hour hand in the direction of the sun. The GMT hand is pointing North. Hence the name RGM applies to their GMT watch. I personally like the GMT hand. It was available in all red or black, with a red N. I like the black/red combo.
jr rocks.
Great thread.
Timely given our recent discussion of RGM watches...here's a nice Hodinkee post on the new Pilot 151A. Pretty classic looking pilot's watch.
Introducing The RGM Pro Aviator 151A, In Stainless Steel and Titanium — HODINKEE - Wristwatch News, Reviews, & Original Stories
It's even available with either a Steel or Ti case, which is also a timely discussion.
Emailed about this late last week. Turn around is pretty quick. Said he could use a flat crystal and the rubber strap from the 254.
Steel. The price he quote was surprisingly low.
Thanks, Glad to help when and where I can. But Roland is pretty close to a god in this field. After all he did great work on your SPM!
I would buy this if I could afford it:
Introducing The RGM Pennsylvania Series 801 "Baseball In Enamel" — HODINKEE - Wristwatch News, Reviews, & Original Stories
Watches with some sort of baseball connection might just become my thing.
FWIW any analog watch can be used to find direction. When the hour hand is pointed towards the sun, south is halfway between the hour hand and noon (1 o'clock if on Daylight Savings Time) if one is in the Northern Hemisphere.
In the southern half of the world 12 on the watch is pointed at the sun and the angle between the hour hand and 12 is north.
How to use a Watch as a Compass
Holy crap, I'm in trouble and need help.
Always like watches and have two. When my Seiko Kinetic died I never got it repaired, battery dead in the Pulsar, stuck a drawer somewhere and forgotten. Starting about three weeks ago, I had begun to browse for watches. Like days of old, the ones I like are expensive, sigh.
So, thinking to myself, "you've got two watches, get them fixed!". Wore the dead Seiko at home for awhile and realised how much I missed it.
This behavior worsened my condition though and now a spiral pattern is forming. God help me, I'm looking at Ball watches.
Now, I'm in the market for having a bike made for me and boy do I dicker about the price of this and that.
But when it comes to watches, oh no, my filter is broken, financial logic is uncalibrated and what I will buy is high indeed. Why, it is perfectly reasonalble to go ahead and buy that watch, I'll wear it and rub it like Gollum from the Hobbits story.
For the money, I'll basically be wearing my new bike frame on my wrist.
If I wore that new Ball Watch while riding my old bike, I wouldn't be able to stop looking at it and would smack my head right into a tree and total the bike (while, of course, saving the watch, arm stretched out during the fall, not a scratch on it, but wouldn't remember my name afterwards) and be out of a bike to ride. Then I would get fat and not be able to think too well (cause I would have hit a damn tree with my head, remember!), lose my livelihood, my health and my good looks. I could ride without wearing the new shiny and expensive Ball watch, you say? I know you not, strange person, I would wear that damn thing everywhere. I must be saved and make a stand here and now.
So, the plan is to pop a battery in the ol' Pulsar and send the Seiko out for repairs and hope that satiates this relapse into an old
desire I thought had passed.
Love this thread, but it has been like crack.
Nice watches posted here, please post more pics to help me get by until I get mine back up and running. (Don't listen to that, it's the watch addict talking, stop, you're killing me).
I mentioned the Patek Philippe museum in a recent previous post...it's like the folks at Hodinkee are lurking here. This was posted recently.
Photo Report: Inside The Patek Philippe Museum (100+ Photos!) — HODINKEE - Wristwatch News, Reviews, & Original Stories
Tons of photos for the watch lovers in the group.
does anyone here have a home ultrasonic cleaner?
i daily wear my watch with a stainless band, and i am anything but easy on stuff. anyway, the band is filthy in all of the little nooks and crannies. would an inexpensive ultrasonic cleaner be a good purchase to throw just the band in every once in a while? any recs?
Tooth brush (used) and a little dish soap would be where I would start. Just let band set in soapy water a while and then use brush. Rinse well.
Ultra sonic would work, but I would try the cheaper idea first.
PLEASE NOTE: Just the band. NOT the whole watch.