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Sounds familiarNic, Get you some OO steel wool and disassemble it. Whie you gave a free day use the wool to pilish each piece going with the grain and when you get done it will look better than brand new.
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Sounds familiarNic, Get you some OO steel wool and disassemble it. Whie you gave a free day use the wool to pilish each piece going with the grain and when you get done it will look better than brand new.
Someone beat me to it to buddyA few minutes earlier and I might have bought that most recent red Hollowpoint. Bummer.![]()
Do you know if that works for any other watches as well?Only OO or OOO are the ones to use. I actually find OOO is too fine so I use OO pretty much exclusively. Also only go with the grain of the metal. Not in circles or against it unless you are trying to remove a deep injury to the metal and then be ready to spend some time getting it back to looking right once you get the gouge out of the metal.
Any of the Ti surfaces. Not stainless steel and not polished Ti unless you really like to do allot of work. I did have to just see on one I had polished out if I could reverse it but once polished you might as well consider it polished.Do you know if that works for any other watches as well?