Try putting the subject (the watch) in the centre of your pics, you seem to like to photo the floor, there is more floor/background in your pics than there is of the watch. Get closer rather than zoom in. Free tips :wingnut:
I noticed a problem with the movement in mine.
The date change does not occur at midnight but at 1:20 am. If I turn the hands within 24 hours, however, the date change occurs exactly at midnight. I was wondering what could be the cause of this difference in behavior, if anyone has suggestion please reply here:
https://forum.replica-watch.info/for...ith-date-issue
Hey,
I love VSF 116610LN! I have a lot of watches and this is my first rep ever and I am very impressed! The only thing which bothers me is cyclops. It is not bad but in certain lighting conditions there is lots of reflections and blueish or greenish AR coating tint. What do you guys thing about it? Anyone could tell me where can I source gen crystal from? The best if I could buy it from European supplier. Thanks!
P.S. Happy NY I hope this year will be way better than "sick" previous one!
Try putting the subject (the watch) in the centre of your pics, you seem to like to photo the floor, there is more floor/background in your pics than there is of the watch. Get closer rather than zoom in. Free tips :wingnut:
The closer you are, the more distortion you’ll get - usually ending up with a big face and forshortened lugs and bracelet. We shoot hundreds of watches for e-commerce platforms, or rather we have Packshot shoot them for us - the camera is typically about 2m from the watch - zoomed in!
edit - for wrist shots, its also nice to show some background / ambience / context. Otherwise we may as well just post the macros from TD sites!
Understood, though I use crop rather than post a lot of background. It takes up mb's of space and increases loading times, for nothing, not to mention the added scrolling required undermining the forum user experience.. and the extra upload time it takes you the author, which all adds to the heat generated by the giant servers that control the web that demand more power consumption adding to global warming and the eventual demise of mankind.
Just use crop man. :rulez:
It is not a movement problem, it is just that whoever that assembled your watch didnt properly set the hands to change the date at midnight, it's an easy job for any competent watchsmith. Same thing can be found on gens, but to the same extent as yours, my father's gen gmt changes at 11:58.
Thanks for the reply. I am aware of the possibility that the hands may be part of the problem. But I have a doubt and would need to understand the technical side. I'm trying to understand, I'm here to learn. I would like a more technical explanation to the question. I am studying, I have a reference manual to improve my understanding on watchmaking.
Looking at videos on the 3135 movement on youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1yAy9iWXfs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1OrJMcNPR0
I do not understand why if the date change is done correctly by turning manually the hands, when the crown shaft is re-engaged the movement presents this shift. The wheels should engage correctly but they do not. I certainly didn't understand a few things about how the 3135 works, and I apologize for that. That's why I'm also looking for an exploded view map of the movement to get a better look at the movement parts.
I could talk forever about it but its just pointless cuz you dont seem to understand. .
I understand fine, you post pics of the floor. When I post pics I take a pic of the subject I'm talking about, not the floor. 95% of your pics are floor. You say you are a photographer.. what do you photo specifically? carpets?
Will try to explain the best i can. In the factory (rolex) it is done by a machine which was specially designed and built for that purpose. For the watchmaker at the bench (which is the case at the rep factories) it is something you learn/develop a technique for over time. The more you do it the easier it becomes. It would be very lengthy to go into detail.
Date/Datejust/subs are much more straightforeward than GMTs which require more setting up in order to ensure all of the hands are synchronised and date change is within tolerance. Once the dial is fitted, turn the winding crown (in handsetting) slowly until the date changes.Stop turning the winding crown the instant the date goes over. Loosely fit the hour hand.
Turn the hand through 24 hrs until the date changes again and double check the position on the hour hand. If its in line fit it/push it home on the hour wheel. Turn the hour hand (always forward) to 6 AM. Now loosely fit the minute hand. This is done to ensure the hour and minute hand line up at 6 o`clock as It is the most obvious if the hands are out of line at 6. Turn the hands forward to midnight and observe the date change. It if is within tolerance fully fit the minute hand and the centre seconds hand. Then ensure all of the hands are parallel and clear of any dial markings etc..and not so high as to contact the inside of the watch crystal. You can find lots of videos about it, basically your watch just needs to get the hands remount. Its not a hands or movement problem, its just whoever assembled your watch was not as accurate.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0AQKIuD8oIk
You dont understand how photography and how its basic works and it shows..