{"id":156,"date":"2007-01-10T17:35:00","date_gmt":"2007-01-11T01:35:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.mccambridge.org\/blog\/2007\/01\/howto-resize-your-own-watch\/"},"modified":"2022-09-11T00:40:45","modified_gmt":"2022-09-11T00:40:45","slug":"howto-resize-your-own-watch","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.mccambridge.org\/blog\/2007\/01\/howto-resize-your-own-watch\/","title":{"rendered":"Howto: Resize Your Own Watch"},"content":{"rendered":"
I haven’t put too many posts up here that are actually helpful to anyone else in any way, so I thought I should start working on that. This may or may not be helpful to anyone either, but what the heck, I already had the pictures…<\/p>\n
Disclaimer:<\/strong> I am not a jewelry \/ watch expert, and in fact know next to nothing about them. What I present here worked for me, but I make no claim that it will work for you and take no responsibility for your actions and any damage they may cause. \ud83d\ude42<\/em><\/p>\n So why am I resizing a watch band, of all things? Well, my parents bought me a Seiko watch for Christmas during my senior year of high school, which I like very much. Unfortunately, wearing it for several years (and drumming with it on) popped one of the hands off one of the smaller dials, and that hand now rattles around freely under the crystal, frequently getting stuck under other dials and jamming the watch up: After sending it off to Seiko for a repair estimate ($162), we decided it wasn’t worth the money to repair, as it would be better spent toward the purchase of a new watch. Fast-forward several months, and I find my very same watch on Amazon.com<\/a> for $105 (no longer available). I was pretty excited to have a chance to get it fixed, so I bought it. Fast-forward another week or so, and my new watch arrives. Three sizes too large for my wrist. Oops.<\/p>\n And so, here we are.<\/p>\nBack-Story<\/h3>\n
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\nNote the alarm dial (bottom) of the old watch is missing a minute hand, which is located upside down jamming its second hand (left dial).<\/p>\nGoals<\/h3>\n
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Tools<\/h3>\n
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Steps<\/h3>\n
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\nI had this step easy, as the old watch was fitted correctly to my wrist already as a model. In my case, I needed to remove 3 links total: 2 from one side of the clasp and 1 from the other.<\/li>\n
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\nThis was the first method I tried, and though it worked for two of the pins I needed to remove, it destroyed 3 mechanical pencils by pushing the metal shroud into the tip. For this reason, I do not recommend this method.
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\nDespite the increased danger in this method, I found it to be the most effective, and though I did destroy another few tacks in the process, I was able to remove the remainder of my pins relatively easily.
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\nFinished watch, down to size with minimal scratches.<\/p>\n