Watch restoration
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Discussion

Simon Bags

Original Poster:

661 posts

195 months

Morning. A friend ask me the other day if knew anyone who could advise on where to get his late Father's Omega brought back to life. I said I do. Right here.

I believe it's from the early 80's (I have pictures if it would help). He has the original bill of sale, box, papers and receipt from the last service. He would like it restored back to new and anything replaced, glass, workings, etc returned after the work is completed and would ideally like official paperwork with an Omega stamp of approval. Straight back to Omega HQ?

Any contact links would be great.

Many thanks.

Simon.


AnotherHamster

26 posts

91 months

I used Watch Doctors to restore my Omega; excellent service and good price. I believe others on PH have also used them and had similar experiences.

the-norseman

14,867 posts

191 months

If he wants it 100% back to factory it needs to go to Omega

RSTurboPaul

12,605 posts

278 months

He may wish to retain some 'patina' - it may increase its market value.

Wills2

27,540 posts

195 months


Sending back to Omega might involve an invoice that far exceeds the value of the watch but details of their restoration service below:

https://www.omegawatches.com/en-gb/customer-servic...


the-norseman

14,867 posts

191 months

I'd personally get the watch serviced but not polished to keep the fathers marks on it, thats what I've done with my dads watch,

re33

332 posts

184 months

Watched this video recently. Sounds like almost all the parts were replaced apart from the case, which they didn't polish.

Factory service results omega

https://share.google/Gb2ZZ98XS8hXEtO4X

Edited by re33 on Saturday 20th December 11:48

NDA

24,063 posts

245 months

the-norseman said:
If he wants it 100% back to factory it needs to go to Omega
Yes, but with a caveat.

I had a 1950's family watch - an Omega - sent to Omega, I took it into Omega's Bond Street boutique. They told me that only a few people in Switzerland could work on it as it was a vintage watch (a simple three hander with no date) and it would take 52 weeks. Not a year. 52 weeks.

So it took a year, they did a great job and it cost more than the watch is worth.

But, worth doing as it's a family watch and it's now as new again.