Found this, not sure if its much help......
Well I have just bought a Damasko DA36 and was wondering what the movement looked like.
I'm not about to unscrew the case back and possibly compromise the WR (not that I'm planning on swimming with it) :lol:
This was taken from the spec
Movement
ETA 2836-2 chromometer grade, fully decorated with Geneva stripes and perlage on all plates and bridges
sounds pretty and im curious, any one got a picture?
Found this, not sure if its much help......
Cheers
Simon
Ralph Waldo Emerson: We ask for long life, but 'tis deep life, or noble moments that signify. Let the measure of time be spiritual, not mechanical.
IMO, it's too bad the anti-magnetic shield disguises the view onto a beautiful movement and renders a display back useless.
The anti-magnetic protection is good for a beater, whereas might be debatable for a dress watch, but nevertheless - if they only came in see-through form :roll:
you'll not see Damasko's ice-hardened case paired with a display back as long as they use a standard ETA movement. a by-product of their ice-hardening process is magnetized steel and the anti-mag cover is needed to protect the movement.
Originally Posted by Pink Floyd
hmm.. didn't notice this info during my homework.. very interesting.
Could you point me in the right direction for further details (ice-hardening/damasko/magnetism) :?:
cheers
Try the search option on this or other fora.
You will find a hell of lot of info......... :)
Cheers,
Daddel.
Got a new watch, divers watch it is, had to drown the bastard to get it!
Originally Posted by WORKSIMON
Thanks, thats what i was after, seems a waste to do all that work and then hide it,
But with the watch case material there was no other option I suppose.