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a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

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elceedee

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a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post20 Sep 2012, 15:19

Hey all,

A new friend arrived this week, a 1981 Seiko A939-5000. I bought the watch because of its design, i love the octagon shaped case and the dark-coloured bezel around the lcd screen makes it a good wear with dark clothes.
I havent owned any Seiko with this A939 movement yet, but allready was a fan of the A359 movement which has some similarity with this one. A nice improvement, compared to the A359, is that the chronograph is in full view (topside) together with time (downside)

I made some pictures during the process of restoring, so if you like i can make this topic a before and after topic. Just let me know.

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Cesar

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Re: a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post20 Sep 2012, 20:45

Very nice!
:-D
He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever.
The reason i collect watches is because it feels like i'm buying time.
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vpn

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Re: a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post20 Sep 2012, 21:23

Superb restoration! I'd love to see how it did look before your restoration job, feel free to post the pics if you want!
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elceedee

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Re: a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post20 Sep 2012, 22:26

Roger that, here it is :-D


The before picture, as advertised by the seller
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The watch was pretty much damaged on both sides (signs of wearing) I use toothpicks to keep the inside of the case free of the water used while sandpapering.
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Sandpapering the different angles (using a cut off strip from a card -the bank-/creditcard type- as a 'sanding block' to secure the sharp lines of the design)
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After sandpapering the case on both sides the polishing of all angles using a dremel-tool and polishing-paste to remove the sandpapermarks (inside a big plastic bowl, to avoid spinned off paste flying around). I also polished the four pushers in this process.
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Sandpapering the angles up and below the display with the correct grain to remove scratches and to regain the original brush. Use a mirror to do this, this way you're sure of a 100% flat surface.
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Greasing the gasket with Seiko silicon grease (pushers are allready greased and fitted in this picture). I use a high quality small brush for this. The alcohol on the left i use for practically all the cleaning of the several parts.
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Removing scratches on the bracelet using the correct grain sandpaper -600- (not done yet in this picture). On the mirror, in this case, as the bracelet is flat
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And the finishing touch using a certain scourer with small grains inside (dont know the brand.. bought a few boxes of them years ago, they dont have a brand on them. Works perfectly)
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I polished the crystal. The whole restauration process took a few hours but the result is (allmost) allways rewarding
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And ehm, why so fast?????? I had just posted this on another forum ;-)
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Re: a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post20 Sep 2012, 22:53

Wow! I'm mesmerized to see the amount of work you had to do in such a short time, the only kind of restoration I've managed to do was just the restoration of the Pulsar logo on my P2! :eek:
Congratulations for the job, it looks like a NOS now! :-D
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Kasper

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Re: a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post20 Sep 2012, 23:42

The most difficult past is sanding the differences corners of the case, trying to keep them sharp.
Also an easy way to see if a watch is refurbished when buying on the bay. No sharp corners anymore.
Very nice work..a keeper.

Have a look at my cheap selfmade sanding machine here on another part of the forum, an easy way to keep the corners sharp :-)
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elceedee

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Re: a '81 Seiko A939-5000 restored

Post21 Sep 2012, 00:03

Hey Casper, thanks for your enthousiasm :-)

I took a look at your sandpapermachine, but i have to say i prefer to stick to the good old handcraft for angles as in the Seiko i described above.

I did however made something similar (well, not really a sandpapermachine, but the same tools); take a sanding extention and remove the velcro.
Take doublesided tape and attach (centered!!!) any watchpart you want which needs rebrusing/sandpapering in a circular way.
Works like a charm!

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