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Posted

Newbie question, I woke up this morning and noticed my 2 year old Tissot PRS516 (automatic) watch that the dial was rotated clockwise about 4 mintues, as of this post its almost 10 minutes rotated. What would cause such a thing? I will bring it to my local watch repair shop but curious is this is a simple fix.

I set the time, that was the last time I remembered everything being normal. 

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Posted

This is fairly common failure. Usually, there is a means to attach the dial to the movement to keep them together. In most watches this is done via little tabs or studs that poke off the back of the dial and are held in place with set screws. It looks like those feet probably broke off, likely due to some large shock or vibration.


A half-assed fix is to just glue the dial to the movement, but that's a bad practice as it make future repairs harder. The right way is to replace the broken dial feet. A reasonable middle ground is to use some non-permanent double-sided tape.

  • Like 1
Posted

Thanks! There has been occasions where my arm inadvertently slams against a door jamb, so maybe that happened. I'll look into those repair methods. Thanks again.

Posted

Broken dial feet seems highly unlikely since the day/ date is rightly placed under it's window.

Check functions throgh crown, winding( if it dose, though automatic, day/date quck set etc. 

I think you may have a snapped/ detached stem.

Regards

Posted

The crown is still working for time adjustment (two clicks out), but it does give a little trouble during the date adjustment (one click out). As I'm rotating it to adjust the date as a test, it moves a number or two then the crown pulls itself back in to fully closed.

And the Day letters aren't perfect under the window anymore they are a little offset which you can see in one of the pictures above.

Posted

...my arm inadvertently slams against a door jamb, so maybe that happened....

 

I agree with @Nucejoe about the unlikelihood of broken dial feet. Maybe the movement has come loose (does it have ring or is it case clamps?) and the entire thing is rotating within?

J

Posted

The back looks to be pressure clamped in. This is a self winding watch and it has this cool window to watch the self winding mechanism work. This is probably a job for a local repair shop, I just didn't want to get shocked by the repair cost. So I was curious what it could have been. 

 

 

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Posted

The winding means the stem is attached, so we are back to ghartman diagosis, the dial plate is rotating. 

First we need to check online for movements diagram to see if dial came with feet?

Braking the feet with the movement in the housing, is not a job for an ordinary man, so you would as well need a bus for taking to vacation ,the kids you are going to have .

Second if you actually managed to break the feet. I agree with ghaftman to use double side tape.

And last but not least , this is not a big job, don,t let the repairman rip you off.

Good luck

Regards

  • Like 2
Posted

Forgot to tell,  you shouldn,t wear the watch or change the day/ date manually before getting the fault  fixed, as movement of date may scratch the paint.

Regards 

Posted

OK good to know. I've made it through most of the day so I'll be careful. An hour or so more I'll be able to pass by repair shop. Thanks again.

Posted

The hands appear to be telling the correct time so it would be just the dial that is revolving. I have a passion for Tissots and have some dating back to the 50's but never known this to happen. Yes the dial feet can break off but both at the same time? and usually when your removing the dial. Tissots usually fit into a grommet in the movement instead of the usual movement edge screw. Are you sure its a Tissot????

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  • Thanks 1
Posted

It looks pretty official to me, I have all the original boxes and stuff from buying it. I did buy it online, but I don't see any clues of it being fake. 

Posted

As Nucejoe says its not a big job but not something I would have attempted as a first project on a quality watch. If you really treasure the watch I would recommend getting professional advice and get a quote for the repair. However if you do attempt it yourself and it is broken dial feet buy some dial dots, tiny dots of sticky which are easy to apply and easy to remove in future.

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/260-x-Watch-Dial-Foot-Pads-3mm-Sticky-Feet-Sticking-Spots-for-Movement-Repairs/263363518242?hash=item3d51b05f22:g:ZzEAAOSwdx1aNAVO

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Chrisdt has a point, tissot brand is well known/advertised, expectedly more fake ones out there than genuine.

Tissot licenced, know-how etc are decent colones used by tissot as well.

You may want to post a question to see if it is genuine, if fake you can possiblg buy another one for the cost of repair.

Regards

Posted
  On 9/18/2018 at 7:43 PM, chrisdt said:

The hands appear to be telling the correct time so it would be just the dial that is revolving. I have a passion for Tissots and have some dating back to the 50's but never known this to happen. Yes the dial feet can break off but both at the same time? and usually when your removing the dial. Tissots usually fit into a grommet in the movement instead of the usual movement edge screw. Are you sure its a Tissot????

Expand  

If I had tissot made in fifties I too would have develoed a passion for them. Surely you agree tissot is more brand nowadays than the watçh it used to be.

Posted

I dropped the watch off at the repair shop yesterday. He pretty much said the same as you guy with the easy repair method vs. him sending it back to Tissot for official replacement of parts and servicing. Since this is my everyday watch, I'm letting him do the repair.

I have a pretty good picture of the front and back in this post, and here's picture from when I bought it 2 years ago. If anyoen spots anything that doesn't look official let me know. I'm pretty good at spotting fakes and I know there's usually a lot of "things to look for" on fakes, so I'll look into that too. 

 

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Posted (edited)

Well I think some of the older Tissot models were underestimated in their quality and only recently have increased in value. People perhaps don't realise that some of the Tissot calibres were the equivilant to some Omega calibres. For instance the 1970's Automatic Seastar from Tissot used their 2481 calibre which is identical to the Omega 1481. Here is a Seastar from 1958 still going strong which must mean something for the quality.

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Edited by chrisdt
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