Nevermind, I was under the impression this was a Forum for people to help one another. Now I realize it's just a place for tiny people who have no life to disrespect others in order to feel important.
My Bad....
Thank You Tucker, your restoring my hope in humanity.
I am obviously new to this but work in and around water so it is an important issue for me. I was just trying to glean wisdom from those that have gone ahead of me. I have spent literally hours looking at this forum and watches and still feel like a lost sheep.
Thank you again for your help.
Don't be so sensitive dude. Every day new people join this forum and have the same (reasonable) questions. If everyone will open the same threads over and over again this forum will be useless.Nevermind, I was under the impression this was a Forum for people to help one another. Now I realize it's just a place for tiny people who have no life to disrespect others in order to feel important.
My Bad....
best bet is to remove the movement and test it There are no guarantees in this world. which explains the price vs gen.
Tucker ?!?!?! You're not total A-hole at all to people. Glad to see a good side of youYou're welcome. If you want serious water resistance go with a Seiko diver. If you want a rep to wear around water get whatever you want and send it to a modder for waterproofing and testing.
Tucker ?!?!?! You're not total A-hole at all to people. Glad to see a good side of you
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I see this advice occasionally, but I think it is bad advice. I understand that by taking the movement out you avoid damaging the movement if water gets in there, but you will then have to open the case to replace the movement and introduce the possibility for contamination.
if you test the watch correctly water should never enter the case even if it leaks like a sieve.
Since most dont have a device that will lower the watch into the water after pressureized that would make it hard to test correctly. of course my assumption is that people with the skill to remove their movement have enough sense to not throw it in the dirt. I guess you think differently
Either test it properly or don't test it at all. It has nothing to do with throwing the watch in the dirt. Apparently you think I am a complete moron. I guess that is your opinion and you are allowed.
There are a whole bunch of ways a watch can go from not leaking to leaking including throwing it on the dirt. Here are a few of the many ways your advice fails: the case back does not get closed all the wau, O-Rings break, they get pinched, a piece of lint, a hair or an eyelash falls into the o-ring.
I stand by my earlier comments. Your advice is unsound. Either test the watch properly or don't bother at all.