Condensation?
Old omega f300, straight on it looks absolutely fine, but at an sharp angle the dial becomes almost I visible. Just a cloudy haze.
If it's on the outside, application of something like wax polish should minimise the effect.
I had it on the inside of one of my watches, I think it was oil rather than water but I may well be wrong.
"A man of little significance"
If it's on the inside it could be oil vapour - a watchperson worth his salt will clean that for a tenner - it's a quick wipe around after the movement is de cased.
More seriously though, it could flag up need for service and oil change. Some oils give off vapour as they age.
B
I’ve worked on lots of watches over the past few years, some of which were grossly over-oiled, and I’ve never seen anything like this. Oil wouldn’t vapourise and condense like this inside a watch, I can’t see how this is feasible. Lets be clear, the oil used in a watch consists of very small drops applied to the pivots of wheels, it remains in the bearing, it doesn’t float about. When a watch is over-oiled the oil spreads away from where it was applied, but that wouldn’t give rise to generation of oil mist.
Its a strange one, assuming the haze is on the inner surface and it isn’t water I don’t know what its caused by.
It is most certainly something to do with the inner surface (given the cleaning I've done on the exterior). It is due a service anyway if i can find someone who'll get back to me, but i' just rather intrigued. Certainly wasn't this way when I bought it a couple of years ago, and it's neverbeen submerged etc, in fact only worn a handful of times in that period due to it not quite fitting my slim wrist. Love the thing, but have just noticed another reason that makes me want to wear it less :(
Would love to see a follow up when it's sorted.
My guess is that battery acid vapour has etched the underside of the glass at some stage.
Looking through it straight on doesn’t cause enough refraction to be noticeable but looking through at an angle does.
If that is the card then it’ll take a polish with polywatch or similar to remove rather than just a clean.
I have had this on several older quartz models, crown out, movement and dial removed and clean inside film off the crystal, very easy to remove as it’s just a cloudy residue that wipes off, not sure why it happens though?
One of my Tag Heuer’s when I first bought it, don’t look too bad until you turn it sideways or remove the dial/movement-
See the misty inner glass after I touched it.
All cleaned up.
It has happened, but not as bad, to two of my seikos that I had serviced in the far east which my UK watchman assured me was due to crap oil being used or that the oil was old.
Looking at the face straight on there was just a hint of mistiness but side on it was more pronounced.
I didn't suggest over oiling.
Of course oil vaporises under specific conditions; with animal/vegetable oil, the lubricant eventually gums up due to natural occurring substances.
On the other hand synthetic oil literally dries up and evaporates.
Evaporates - there's the clue.
B
Last edited by Brian; 9th December 2018 at 11:38.
I had something similar on my Seiko 5, thought it was pretty strange but you could see the dial perfectly straight on. Back in September I opened it up and gave the inside a clean which sorted it out but until this thread never even thought what it might be. It wasn’t moisture or anything like that as I left the watch in an airing cupboard to see if it was moisture related.
One possible cause with quartz watches is a leaking battery.
As for synthetic oils evaporating the condensing on the inside of the glass, I’ve never seen this happen and I have a couple of watches that haven’t been opened up for 10 years.
If I could turn the clock back 9 yrs to the time when I worked as a devlopment chemist I would have the equipment to test this ‘synthetic oil evaporation’ theory and see what really happens, it’s an intriguing question.
Last edited by Brian; 10th December 2018 at 14:01. Reason: inserted quotes
I've seen the same on plenty of watches but never as bad as the op. The last one where it was noticeable was a Citizen auto but it's more common on quartz, something I put down to quartz watches being able to run for 20+ years with only battery changes and hence longer for the oils to evaporate and fog up the crystal.
It does indeed, pretty cool although I don't know why it's designed like that. The case back can be removed without doing this tjough. Just a case of working out which screws inside would have to be undone to remove the crown and the movement so I can get access to the crystal, or whether more work is involved.
I once forgot to screw the crown down on my SMP whilst on holiday in Turkey. Went for a swim and noticed condensation on the inside of the crystal. Left the watch out in the sun to dry out which it did, but it left a film on the inside of the crystal which could only be seen from an angle. Watch ran ok so I just left it.
A couple of years later again on holiday I jumped into the water on a boat trip. The water was ice cold as it was run off from the mountains, later that day I noticed the film had disapeared. I presume it was the shock of going from 30c to about 5c!!!!!
It may be that the watch has let in a small amount of water like mine and this has dried out.