drphileasfogg
481
Very Nice
About the average waiting time for vintage service.
Advice for removing moisture
By: Letson : May 18th, 2018-19:47
My wife and I were just caught in an unexpected rainstorm while walking home from dinner, and my watch’s crystal (vintage 2573, 10-200 movement) is fogged with moisture. It’s still running normally as far as I can tell. I have placed it in a container of ...
Thank you, Rogi.
By: Letson : May 18th, 2018-20:43
This is what I was looking for. I had already scheduled a visit to an AD and was considering a service by Patek as a baseline for my ownership (I’ve owned the watch for around 9 months). This probably bumps that date forward a little. Your comment about t...
Similar Experience
By: baufoam : May 18th, 2018-21:36
I was wearing a Patek 1526 during the Fall and Winter while working in New York City. That particular watch had been built in 1949. I noticed the crystal fogging up when I would walk off the cold street into the place where I was working (which was warm)....
Update
By: Letson : May 19th, 2018-05:13
Many thanks for the replies. I put the watch in dry rice in a sealed ziploc bag overnight (~8 hrs). Caseback on, crown in closed. This morning, as you can see in the attached pictures, the moisture under the crystal appears to have abated, and the watch s...
Silica
By: Chimaera : May 28th, 2018-00:01
Rice does the job, but silica gel even better - those little bags of “rocks” you find in electronics packaging. You can get some on the internet, or any photographic shop. But that is “first aid” - strongly suggest a proper service. Most likely only a wor...