Jump to content

Greetings from Coral Gables, Florida.


Recommended Posts

Hello all,  

Just joined this forum from Coral Gables, Florida.  That's really Miami.  But like most people in Florida, I'm not originally from here. I am originally from Venezuela, but lived in 7 countries growing up.  My first watch was a Timex that I got when I was 11 years old.  When I turned 16 I got my first automatic mechanical watch, an Omega Genève. And I've been a big fan of Omega since then.  I own a good number of them, mostly sports Omegas from the 70's and 80's.  

I have dabbled in repairing watches but I haven't taken on anything too complicated.  I hope to learn a bit from the folks here.

At any rate, I look forward to being part of this forum.

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Welcome, cool avatar. It looks like a program I use for figure drawing; they have hands and feet and heads like that. Anyway, I also got a Timex as a first watch, at about 9. Since then, I have had a secret guilty love of them, and there has been a stigma about them, in the US anyway. Here on this forum, there are many proud Timex owners. It's heartwarming. Also like you, I dabbled for quite a while and collected many watches. I am just starting the second course offered here - I signed up for three of them. It really makes sense to do that if you want to learn how the easier and better way than doing it on your own. These are wheels not easily reinvented.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The avatar is actually a picture of a Doc Savage bronze bust I have. You may not be familiar with Doc Savage, but he's a character originally from pulp magazines from the 30's.  He's considered by many to be the first superhero.  His adventures became paperback books in the 70's and I read a ton of them growing up, around the same time I got my first Timex!   Speaking of which, I see Timex is putting out some really cool watches.  I've been looking at the Timex-PanAm watch given that I had the chance to fly many a PanAm flight back in the day.

I'll be thinking about taking the courses here.  Just have to get my Life schedule a bit re-arranged.  Working on that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/25/2023 at 9:06 AM, Espressomac said:

The avatar is actually a picture of a Doc Savage bronze bust I have. You may not be familiar with Doc Savage, but he's a character originally from pulp magazines from the 30's.  He's considered by many to be the first superhero.  His adventures became paperback books in the 70's and I read a ton of them growing up, around the same time I got my first Timex!   Speaking of which, I see Timex is putting out some really cool watches.  I've been looking at the Timex-PanAm watch given that I had the chance to fly many a PanAm flight back in the day.

I'll be thinking about taking the courses here.  Just have to get my Life schedule a bit re-arranged.  Working on that.

Well I am a Marvel/ Stan Lee collector and have a few Doc Savages. I have most of the Shadow issues, and he is mingled in there a few times. "Tougher than Tarzan, braver than Bond", what a guy. About Pan Am flights: we lived on those in the 60s. It beat the heck out of flying Icelandic, if you were ever unlucky enough to try that. And finally, about the courses, just do it for yourself. It's a treat. It is taking me a very long time to get to #2 because I didn't have an organized place to do the work. I am getting there.

2 hours ago, JohnR725 said:

only two days in London?

Hi John, I am almost off my self-imposed time out but have been following you a bit. I would say "Do you ever sleep?", but people in glass houses and all.. 😆
 

Edited by Galilea
Link to comment
Share on other sites

@Galilea That is really great that you not only know who Doc Savage is, but also have some of his comic books. The only two statues on my desk are both Doc Savage, the aforementioned bronze bust and the bronze-colored one of him fighting a huge snake. Over the years I've grown to have a big comic book collection, and although I have a few Doc Savages, my collection is mostly super heroines, including a deep set of Wonder Woman books. Actually the watch world is part of the reason I let they comic books fall by the wayside.  What Marvel titles have you collected?

 

@JohnR725 I've been lucky enough to have visited London on numerous occasions so I'm just stopping there to meet up with some friends before going on to Hamburg, Berlin and Leipzig, cities I've never visited.  Then to Switzerland to visit, along with my wife, my sister-in-law who lives in a town called Lutry, just outside of Lausanne. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • With something like this a gasket seal for instance if i cant find the relevant information i would use instinct to decide what fits and works best. You have the original gasket ( well maybe its original or hopefully it is )so its fairly easy to determine what material to use. Shape , for that i would look at the gasket seatings, are there grooves or recesses in either the case back or case or both, what shape are the grooves, flat or round etc, how does the gasket sit and behave in those seatings. Next thickness,that is going to be a bit of a guess, especially if the gasket is a soft one that has been heavily compressed over time. This is where a selection is going to come in handy, personally i would be choosing one that is giving me the feel of compression as its coming into contact with both of the mating surfaces. But not so much that the gasket is going to squash out and become distorted, again this is guesswork and feel is required with the allowance of compression over time, something you may want to check after six months. This part is a little moot as without a pressure test, good water resistance is not assured so the watch needs to treated as such and not as if it were a new diving watch ( not that i would treat any new diving watch as if were ). What you want to expect from your efforts is a little accidental rain catch, if you want more water resistance guarantee then a professional gasket replacement and pressure test is what you should be seeking which will be more than the value of this watch. Coincidentally i have the same watch, been searching for a stem for it for a while now. 
    • It might not be a hook it might be something like this. But still the mainspring is catching on something on the slip ring because it doesn't have its own outer slipping part like the modern ones. The image below came from some vintage Omega thing I'll have to see if I can find where that has gone to.documentation A different book has this          
    • I did not see a hook on the slip ring. I will check again tomorrow.
    • I think I'm having a confusion here? You would apply the breaking grease to the inside of the barrel then the slip ring would go inside. Then the mainspring goes in and it catches on the hook on the slip ring.
    • Thank you for the once again very thorough and informative reply. I'm sure at this point it's academic, but I'm always curious to know best practices. This then implies that If I'm planning to reuse the old mainspring (which I am), I should also reinstall the slip ring. I will do that and apply braking grease to the inside of the slip ring as if it were the barrel. This makes the most sense to me. Also, that bit about the center cannon pinion is very helpful. That wasn't in the tech sheet I have (attached) dated 1970. Omega 1001(1).pdf
×
×
  • Create New...