This tutorial is aimed not only at watchmakers, but also at watch dealers and collectors wanting to familiarize themselves with the process of hand-polishing. The procedure shown below was passed to me by my father (and to him by his brother Mihajlo Hacko, Master Watchmaker since 1948. who still does his own watch repairs!)
Guinea pig: 15 years old Explorer II Ref 16570, long overdue for decent case re-polishing.
I prefer to do all case polishing by hand.
Step 1:
To get rid of scratches, start with coarse sand paper, grade 220.
Keep it parallel and keep polishing until you remove ALL scratches, no matter how deep. This step is very important.
All scratches are gone, but the surface is very coarse and dull. That's OK. The most important thing here is to remove ALL scratches and to have the grain lines parallel with the case.
Step 2: Switch to dry paper grade 800. I use German made, but most sand papers of similar quality will do the trick. You can buy this grade at any automotive shop supplier.
Don't rush - take your time (at least 5 minutes per side). The surface is still dull but we are heading in the right direction.(note how more light is now reflected from the steel surface)
Same surface, magnified. Keep it parallel! If I can do it, you can do it too :-)
Step 3: very much the same, now with finer grade dry paper - here I use Swiss made 1600 powder coated jewellers paper available from jewellers suppliers. This is jewellers stuff, so they prefer to call it 4/0
Take your time, don't rush - 5 min. per side
The steel surface now reflects even more light and looks fairly smooth.
Step 4: More of the same. Medium: 3M Film sheet polishing (plastic)grade 60 microns and 10 microns (2-3 minutes each).
Available from jewellery suppliers only. 3M film feels like ordinary plastic sheet, definitely not your ordinary sand paper :-)
If there are still any visible imperfections go back to Step 3.
magnified
Step 5: polishing on buffing wheel
There are far too many different polishing cotton wheels available; go for medium soft cotton disk, 10cm diameter.
Apply some chromium oxide rouge (known as Green Steel Rouge)
Keep polishing. Be careful not to over-buff edges!
Once you achieve mirror-like finish, clean in ultrasonic.
piece of cake!
one more shot
Cheers !
1 comment:
I never knew polishing rolex cases should be as easy as pie. Kudos to you... this article is very informative.
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