Have you tried using polywatch?
Hi
I was wondering if the scratches on this MM300 hardlex crystal can be removed. Any tips, I could try myself as it won't be sold, famous last words.
Thank you
Brian
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Have you tried using polywatch?
Their is a new product from polywatch that does glass as well - it contains diamond paste.watchobsession sell it £23.Or you could change the glass?
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I believe Hardlex is essentially mineral glass? If so you should definitely be able to improve the appearance with the application of some Brasso or similar in combination with some elbow grease. Careful not to get the Brasso or whatever you use down the side of the crystal.
Even scratches in sapphire can be rendered considerably less conspicuous by the same method; did this myself on a Rolex 15200 I owned once. It was made near-invisible at the next service.
Did they not replace a scratched crystal as part of the service????Originally Posted by monogroover
M
I'll try brasso then and be careful. Thank you
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Thank you for this also
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Ouch that will be hard to sort out on the watch.
Removed from the watch you can put the polish onto a strip of flat leather and slide it back and forth.
I found that method works way better than doing little circles with polish on a cloth with your finger. That takes forever.
You wouldn't recommend a tremmel with soft brush and paste, not sure exactly what blurring is but it comes up abit when I search in Google
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Rule no 1 when polishing scratches: always work in the direction of the scratch.
I`ve had some success in polishing mineral crystals using diamond paste and a Dremmel, even made some impact on a chipped sapphire this way, but you have to be careful not to overheat the glass and crack it. It's easier to take the sharpness off the scratch, thus making it harder to see, than to totally remove it. People say they've removed scratches when in actual fact they've made them far less noticeable, bbuit a look under a strong magnifier will still highlight the damaged area.
I don`t know how much harder the Seiko crystals are the mineral glass, possibly no harder, I don`t know, but I always fit a new crystal (if available) rather than spend ages trying to polish. Acrylic crystals are easy to do, anything else isn`t.
I apologise if this is a dumb question, but do you mean on a scratch keep polishing over it in the same direction of the scratch? So not accross, or in swirls?
I suppose I'm just double checking because I didn't think that was correct - I thought you were supposed to be horizotal / swirls. This might explain why my use of polywatch / Xerapol on acrylic and Cape Cod (on polished steel) never worked as hoped
Just get a sapphire replacement crystal.
Not hard to find and relatively straightforward to fit.
Lots of Tunas are upgraded this way.
Thanks that's probably what I will do eventually .. I'll put that on my Xmas list :) Sent from my LYA-L09 using TZ-UK mobile app