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Posted

Hello everyone from northern france. I am just starting to get involved in watch repairing . Today I disassembled, cleaned and reassembled a seiko 7005 8020 from my father and it seems to be working... but now the doubts are coming for cleaning, changing plexi... and as i saw some of you have done repairing on this model..here i am !! ;-)

Great forum guys

see you

Fernando

Posted

If you ask me, since you serviced the movement you just did the complicated part. Everything else should be easy peasy.

What questions do you have abou cleaning and changing the crystal ?

Posted

Hello and welcome. Lots of good info here for you.

 To obtain the correct crystal for a Seiko you need the numbers on the back of the watch case when you order from your supplier.

Posted

Hi, thx for the first info.

I need to replace the plexiglass and the two rubber gaskets. i have seen  announces in ebay but if some of you have some feedback on best place to get them, happy to hear.

Also if you have some hints on what products use to clean the stainless steel, it's kind of rusty.

Please let me know if i should move the topic outside of this thread.

IMG_1466.jpg

Posted
7 minutes ago, Lambchop said:

Hello

you say the stainless steel is RUSTY??

the watch had water inside, maybe rusty  is not the word (i am not a native speaker). It's stained and I dont want to use product that may damage it.

Posted (edited)

Bienvenue!

If it's just stained, try a toothbrush with warm soapy water. If that doesn't work, my personal favorite cleaner is a car polish (the very fine kind). It's also really cheap.

For parts, I love ottofrei because they have a gigantic inventory. For you in France, try cousinuk, the shipping might be cheaper and they also have a lot of stuff. Their website is also easy to search (create an account, it's free).

Edited by frenchie
  • Like 1
Posted
Hello
you say the stainless steel is RUSTY??

Stainless steel rusts quite readily when in contact with mild steel and moisture. I doubt if that has happened here but stainless is not as resistant to chemical attack as you might think.
Cheers Neil
  • Like 1
Posted

Hi Neil

This is true- I had wondered whether it had been sat in seawater for a while... That combined with being a fairly cheap (easily pressed/machined) alloy.

james 

 

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