I dont want to sound condescending but of course you need the case holder, without it you will be in all sorts of trouble.
Also, why do you want to open up your Rolex?
I recently aquired this thing from Cousins as a 'cheap' way to open the casebacks of Rolex wristwatches... has anyone else tried using it? I may well be completely stupid, but i can't find a way of wedging my case in the 'holder' (such as it is) firmly and completely level. or indeed even loosely at even a roughly even level. they sell a 'case holder' separately but Cousins don't supply it, so i get the feeling it's not required... so what am i missing?
i imagine i need to have the thing at exactly 180˚, otherwise the teeth on the die won't engage with the grooves on the caseback, and i'll be in whole heap of mess. and i have no idea how to acheive that with the holder that's supplied.
the video on esslinger shows the separate 'case holder' that would appear to do the job, but surely it's possible without that...? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGyJYis7sw0
thoughts/ideas?
I dont want to sound condescending but of course you need the case holder, without it you will be in all sorts of trouble.
Also, why do you want to open up your Rolex?
I would have thought that you need to rotate the watch 90° from where it is in your picture...such that the raised lugs on the holder are between those on the watch. Apparently you should be using a cloth to protect the watch...see pdf instructions.
Edit That works for this guy:
Last edited by PickleB; 14th April 2019 at 22:16.
That was just the ticket! Off it comes. Nice and easy. Thank you for the video.
So two questions emerge:
i) how do i avoid the dreaded 'cross threading' when screwing it back on?
ii) if i can't get the gasket back on without it spilling outside the case, i presume that means it's a gonner? is there any other way of telling? and how on earth do i work out what type i need? plenty to choose from here... https://www.cousinsuk.com/product/ca...iss?code=R9670
I can only help you with the first of your two questions. To avoid cross-threading, start off by hand and turn the back the wrong way. As it goes around you should feel it going slightly wonky and then click (sort of) back level. That 'click' is when the starts of the threads pass each other. Go around again to check. Then, just after the 'click' (maybe clunk) swap the direction of turn and the threads should engage nicely. Continue turning by hand to check that there is no undue resistance. Having done it the first time, take it off again and have another go before turning it down as far as you can by hand, fingers and pressure from your palm etc before using the tool to tighten it up.
That's really helpful. Thank you.
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I’m seeing a lot of unnecessary metal touching metal in this thread.
For the gasket lube it so that it doesn’t catch, deform or even get shredded as you tighten down. Also with me not being an expert I always mark where the case back was before opening, that way I can achieve the same tightness? Having said this I’ve only ever done this to some of my cheap Seiko watches.
I use a grease pad to lube the gasket before putting it all back together.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Grease-pa...wAAOSw8PJb-XWq
Helps it slip in better as you put that caseback on, preventing snagging. Be careful though... you could leave a greasy mess if you don't take it easy.
this is really helpful, thank you.
i know precisely what you mean, and it always worries me too. but what are the alternatives? if the caseback needs to come off, it needs to come off!
this is a good point: how to know how far to tighten? your suggestion to tighten as much as it was previously is probably a good starting point, but how is one meant to gauge precisely how tight it should be?
that's an extremeley good shout, thank you.
no - but i certainly have now! thank you for pointing out this is extremely handy guide... (i'd love to see the rest of this book)
....although the ref 6564 i am working on here isn't listed, which is a bit irritating. i guess i could gamble on it being a 29-292-76 which seem to fit the typical 1500, 5500, 1004, 6694-type 34mm cases, and hope for the best.
thank you vm in any case.