Matthew Evans
Elite Cafe Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2017
- Messages
- 410
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Good luck with the parts, keep us posted.These past few months I’ve been learning a lot about watches and have fallen in love with them. I engrave few jewelry items for jewelry store and they specialize in watches. After watching them go through a watch pressure testing and the whole works ect I was amazed. I was given a box a parts to play with and will be engraving them. thank you for the information Mr Biggs
On the note about cheaper watches try to get something with solid links the rolled and folded links are much harder than those with solid links and are a nightmare to engrave especially starting outVoiding warranties………..This area is a complete minefield.
Depending on the watch manufacturer, if any unauthorised person opens the watch, engraves the watch or otherwise tinkers with the watch………all warranties are voided.
The higher end you go, the more likely this is to happen and the more expensive it becomes.
Some jewellery stores/watch repair places will not touch certain brands because they can’t get original parts and they are left holding the baby if anything goes wrong. Others may be willing to take the risk. It’s a crap shoot. Try replacing the back of a Rolex with an original part and see how much it “officially” costs. It can be eye watering.
You also have to be careful with something like a dive watch because they are pressure tested and peoples lives may depend on it. Again, some watch repair places may be willing to go down that road if they have the equipment but others won’t. Another crap shoot.
You have two choices with engraving………The first is to have it dismantled by a professional or do it yourself but if the watch doesn’t work properly when all put back together……..who is responsible and who pays?
You can get the client to have it disassembled and then reassembled…Then it is all on them for the watch working or not.
The second is to engrave the watch while it is still all together. This has its own dangers because all that vibration and banging away on the case can loosen screws etc….again, who fixes this and at what cost?
All of this is something that should be explained to clients with private commissions.
My best advise is do not even think about high end watches when starting out. Instead, go to Walmart and buy a cheap stainless steel battery watch and pull it to bits and have at it. It will give you a feel for the whole process and if you completely butcher it, then it doesn’t matter............. Then repeat the process a few times.
It’s a lot trickier than you think and there is a lot to learn.
Cheers
Andrew
there was a nearly hi end jewelry store in our area that's now departed. my niece worked for this store for a time. during her tenure there, they applied for a rolex "dealership" (if that's the correct term), and were politely turned down. the reasoni given was that there was a rolex outlet x number of miles nearby. the idea was to limit the number of outlets in a given area.Rolex is fussy about who can even be an authorized Rolex dealer, let alone work on their watches and order parts! They also reserve the right to pull their watches out of a store on the spot if they feel it is in their best interest in maintaining their standards.