Watches - another OCD problem
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Not a great pic, but it’s a great watch @Cutlasshound
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The Black Bay in silver looks good. It sounds like it won't tarnish, which is a bit of a shame, as I like the idea of a what that develops a patina.
Zenith have done a time only watch and a chronograph in silver. In a recent interview, Julien Tornare (the CEO) said that they considered stabilising the case so it wouldn't tarnish, but then they decided not to. They wanted a case that aged with use.
I don't recall seeing the silver chronograph before, but it looks quite good.
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There are silver alloys that do not tarnish, e.g., argentium.
Silver is a different beast from bronze, IMHO. Bronze really takes on a multitude of hues as it patinates. Silver starts from being the whitest metal and turns grey, and then near black. It doesn't patina in a very interesting manner.
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yeah. the sales staff and I were having a chat about the silver. it really comes down to personal preference at the end of the day. I did mention that it was uncommon to have silver on watches and you don't see it too often, like the zenith @Graeme posted. they did mention that Tudor has added alloys to make sure it wouldn't tarnish. I also did mention that I do like my silver ageing/ oxidising as shown by the goros I was wearing.
@Anesthetist that is one of the best colour ways out there of the BB
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I think more than the aesthetics of silver oxidation, I'd be concerned with the wear and tear. Silver's pretty soft and watches get banged around a lot. Ok, maybe that's just mine, but still.
Of course, gold is even softer, and that's been used for watches since forever, so maybe I'm completely off base.
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The advantage of platinum is that, unlike gold, it does not wear out. The molecules just shift but are not lost. Anyway, it's heavier than gold. Wearing platinum is said to be incomparable.
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The platinum Rolex (with the light blue dial) are super heavy.
@Eisenherz - Can you give precisions on what you wrote reg. Pl vs Au? I'm not sure I understand. Thanks.
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Gold loses atoms while wearing it rubs off, so to speak. This does not happen with platinum. Here the atoms are just shifting back and forth while wearing. They do not leave their atomic compound. At some point (in 1000 years) gold disappeared through wear, platinum never. Is that too much physics? Sorry!
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this is my favorite, but I just stand in front of the shop window and press my nose wide on the glass. they won't let me in :-
Rolex President Ice blue Platinum -
I supposed 925 silver is made tougher than pure silver because of the alloys used. As compared to 950 and 995 which are more uncommon, 925 with 7.5 alloy is much strong than the latter.
in saying that though, I remember regretting choosing white gold over platinum for my ex wedding ring, which I regretted
(not the ring):P, because of how soft white gold was and the scratches that came along compared to platinum, which I knew to be harder than all of the above. -
Based on my wife's rings, platinum will get light scratches and eventually go from a polished finish to a satin finish, but it's far more durable than gold. Her rings look new still and my gold wedding ring is developing some worryingly thin spots. Though to be fair, my ring is secondhand and a few decades older.
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@Eisenherz - Do you have a name for this phenomenon? Never heard of it & would like to look into it. There are many gold artifacts dated thousands of years old, so I’m curious.
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there is no term. the atomic bond is very strong with platinum.
gold does not disappear by itself but it stains off when you wear it, platinum does not -
If you're really looking for hard and scratch resistant, there have been a couple of watched over the years made out of tungsten, which is extremely hard and very heavy. Lum-Tec did a run of them years ago, but I heard they were a huge hassle, because of the difficulties with tooling such a hard material.
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Gold loses atoms while wearing it rubs off, so to speak. This does not happen with platinum. Here the atoms are just shifting back and forth while wearing. They do not leave their atomic compound. At some point (in 1000 years) gold disappeared through wear, platinum never. Is that too much physics? Sorry!
Thats awesome! Thanks for sharing! [emoji41]
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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at this rate, I'll settle for vibranium. it's stronger than steel and 1/3 of the weight. it is also vibration absorbent.