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Old 15 February 2014, 07:56 AM   #1
soundserious
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my iii65 ref 5513 sub

Relatively new to this forum so thought I'd post a pic of one of my watches.

This is a circa 1965 Submariner with an interesting dial. :)


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Old 15 February 2014, 08:01 AM   #2
CrownMe
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it sure is interesting. thanks for sharing!
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Old 15 February 2014, 08:07 AM   #3
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Now is that a crackle or a cracked dial :-) I have had couple that look like that on same era sub. Be interesting to know what the went through to get like this. M
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Old 15 February 2014, 08:09 AM   #4
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Interesting. I have only seen WGS glossy dials crack like that.
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Old 15 February 2014, 09:22 PM   #5
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Meters first!
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Old 15 February 2014, 09:49 PM   #6
Vincent65
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Nice, honest old gilt sub 5513, thanks for sharing. I think it looks cool. The dial has crazed, and you can see it mainly emanating and radiating out from the lume plots, so I'd guess some sort of super-slow chemical reaction with the Tritium mix and the lacquer caused it. Maybe reaction to sunlight as well ('drying out'?!)
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Old 16 February 2014, 12:25 AM   #7
shane0mack
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Originally Posted by Vincent65 View Post
Nice, honest old gilt sub 5513, thanks for sharing. I think it looks cool. The dial has crazed, and you can see it mainly emanating and radiating out from the lume plots, so I'd guess some sort of super-slow chemical reaction with the Tritium mix and the lacquer caused it. Maybe reaction to sunlight as well ('drying out'?!)
Drying out was my initial reaction, Vincent. Although, I haven't seen enough examples of this to know if that's "a thing".
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Old 16 February 2014, 12:15 AM   #8
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Definatley a neat dial, I love it! Good looking sub
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Old 16 February 2014, 01:00 AM   #9
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Interesting but in the end the dial is badly dammaged and the lume plots looked washed. A shame because a gilt is awsome
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Old 16 February 2014, 01:23 AM   #10
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You may want to talk to someone about stabilizing that dial if you haven't already. Those cracked pieces can get into your movement easily.
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Old 16 February 2014, 02:02 AM   #11
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You may want to talk to someone about stabilizing that dial if you haven't already. Those cracked pieces can get into your movement easily.
...or sell it to a "spider dial affecianio" as stabilizing the dial can be problematic.
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Old 16 February 2014, 03:23 AM   #12
soundserious
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Thanks for the comments everyone. The watch is beautiful on the wrist and I wouldn't dream of changing it. Regarding the plots they are not washed and continue to glow briefly when exposed to strong light. I agree with the comment about "drying out" as it does seen to be doing so from different angles.

I wonder what happened to this watch to make the dial so remarkable? There is an faint inscription on the back, the watch was gifted from father to son in 1976, adds some real charm to the piece.

How does one "stabilize" a dial? I imagine it would involve spraying it with some kind of lacquer?
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Old 16 February 2014, 03:33 AM   #13
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Will pieces get into the movement if there's no date window for it to fall into?
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