Prof’s Crystals
I want to thank RWi, its members and moderators for having such an interesting and engaging place to spend my time and to help spread the word about my passion: watch crystal AR coating.
As a child, I grew up in the watch business because my mother worked for Patek Phillipe in New York City. I remember her bringing home parts of watches and I spent hours and hours playing with them. I could never find enough parts to put a complete watch together, but then I was about 7 years old.
Later on I started buying Rolex, Pateks and similar watches.
For several years I was a professor at a University in Colorado, hence the title "prof".
Then I retired.
I got bored and began a company that bought, refinished and sold heavy equipment: Think John Deere, Caterpillar, Vermeer; excavators, backhoes, chippers etc and a few Peterbuilt and Kenworth tractors etc. Eventually liquidated that business.
I thought that was probably enough careers in one lifetime but I got hooked on watch crystals.
My first rep purchase was an Audemars Piguet Diver that had a highly detailed dial. Driving up I-25 north of Denver with my arm out the window I kept looking at that beautiful watch but it kept reflecting the sun. I wanted to see that amazing dial without all those reflections.
I decided that, since I had an appropriate research background, I would design an anti-reflective coating that would make the crystal virtually disappear. That idea came to fruition about 5 years and a number of mistakes and dead ends later.
Since then I have continued refining my process.
I do not service movements, but I can fix minor issues, sometimes; and if the problem is beyond my scope I know enough to send my watches to someone who loves and has been working on watch movements for a long, long time.
When it comes to anti-reflective coating on sapphire watch crystals however, I consider myself an expert, and that is what I spend most of my time doing.
Check out some of the pictures below of what my AR can do for some watches and a side-by-side comparison of stock AR versus my anti-reflective coating. I will have another posting showing costs that will help you decide if and what you might need done, and I am working on developing a web page.
Have fun and always, always go happy tick tocking along!
HERE ARE SOME PICTURES. THERE ARE MANY MORE FROM CUSTOMERS ETC, BUT I DID NOT WANT THIS INTRO TO BE TOO LONG:
FIRST 2 ARE FROM A CUSTOMER
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TO SHOW DIFF BETWEEN REP AR AND MY AR
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FULL 2XAR ON ROLEX
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FULL 2XAR ON AP DIVER CHRONO
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FULL 2XAR ON 2017 RG AP
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FULL 2XAR ON PELAGOS ZF
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FULL AR ON AP PANDA
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CUSTOMER PIC ON AP15400
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Prof’s Crystals
I want to thank RWi, its members and moderators for having such an interesting and engaging place to spend my time and to help spread the word about my passion: watch crystal AR coating.
As a child, I grew up in the watch business because my mother worked for Patek Phillipe in New York City. I remember her bringing home parts of watches and I spent hours and hours playing with them. I could never find enough parts to put a complete watch together, but then I was about 7 years old.
Later on I started buying Rolex, Pateks and similar watches.
For several years I was a professor at a University in Colorado, hence the title "prof".
Then I retired.
I got bored and began a company that bought, refinished and sold heavy equipment: Think John Deere, Caterpillar, Vermeer; excavators, backhoes, chippers etc and a few Peterbuilt and Kenworth tractors etc. Eventually liquidated that business.
I thought that was probably enough careers in one lifetime but I got hooked on watch crystals.
My first rep purchase was an Audemars Piguet Diver that had a highly detailed dial. Driving up I-25 north of Denver with my arm out the window I kept looking at that beautiful watch but it kept reflecting the sun. I wanted to see that amazing dial without all those reflections.
I decided that, since I had an appropriate research background, I would design an anti-reflective coating that would make the crystal virtually disappear. That idea came to fruition about 5 years and a number of mistakes and dead ends later.
Since then I have continued refining my process.
I do not service movements, but I can fix minor issues, sometimes; and if the problem is beyond my scope I know enough to send my watches to someone who loves and has been working on watch movements for a long, long time.
When it comes to anti-reflective coating on sapphire watch crystals however, I consider myself an expert, and that is what I spend most of my time doing.
Check out some of the pictures below of what my AR can do for some watches and a side-by-side comparison of stock AR versus my anti-reflective coating. I will have another posting showing costs that will help you decide if and what you might need done, and I am working on developing a web page.
Have fun and always, always go happy tick tocking along!
HERE ARE SOME PICTURES. THERE ARE MANY MORE FROM CUSTOMERS ETC, BUT I DID NOT WANT THIS INTRO TO BE TOO LONG:
FIRST 2 ARE FROM A CUSTOMER
![]()
![]()
TO SHOW DIFF BETWEEN REP AR AND MY AR
![]()
FULL 2XAR ON ROLEX
![]()
FULL 2XAR ON AP DIVER CHRONO
![]()
FULL 2XAR ON 2017 RG AP
![]()
FULL 2XAR ON PELAGOS ZF
![]()
FULL AR ON AP PANDA
![]()
CUSTOMER PIC ON AP15400
![]()