Water resistancing...
Discussion
Just for academic purposes...
I recall someone mentioned that silicon grease could be used so I thought I'd try good old Vaseline ("petroleum jelly") on an old sports watch (a £10 Lorus that was 50 metres water resistant until I tried to change the battery; prior to that it withstood swimming in the sea and showers/baths). I will leave it in a cup of water overnight and see if the screen mists over after a few days once removed (a subtle sign that water has leaked in) or at worst water can be seen inside.
Anyone wanna place bets on the outcome?
I recall someone mentioned that silicon grease could be used so I thought I'd try good old Vaseline ("petroleum jelly") on an old sports watch (a £10 Lorus that was 50 metres water resistant until I tried to change the battery; prior to that it withstood swimming in the sea and showers/baths). I will leave it in a cup of water overnight and see if the screen mists over after a few days once removed (a subtle sign that water has leaked in) or at worst water can be seen inside.
Anyone wanna place bets on the outcome?
cyberface said:
Shadow - stop arsing about and get yourself a night monster or a black monster. You know you want one, you know it makes sense. And they're waterproof.
All you need to decide is how black you want to go
The night monster certainly would be stealthy 


Oh, mama! You're right. But this was just for academic purposes.All you need to decide is how black you want to go
The night monster certainly would be stealthy 


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