Disassembling a Rolex

Login to rate this video.

You can place this video on your website by inserting the (X)HTML code below:

Options:
pixels
pixels
Embed code:
<iframe src="https://www.snotr.com/embed/14659" width="400" height="330" frameborder="0"></iframe>

You can email this video to your friends by entering their addresses below:

Your information:
Recipients:

add Add another recipient

Human verification:

People who liked this video also liked

AtmosFear freefall tower at Liseberg Gothenburg in Sweden
I Can't Taste Anything
1087 Days in Just 15 Minutes - Growing Plant Time Lapse COMPILATION
Colored balls elevator. Particle fluid. Music. Molecular Script. Video 4K
2019 Tasmanian Tiger Photo
Budgie Balancing Trick

Comments

9 comments posted so far. Login to add a comment.

Expand all comments

Picture of ringmaster54 achievements

+6 1. ringmaster commented 9 years ago

Beautiful documentary about a watch and a time consuming work. But doesn't say how many parts the watch has or how long the repairs took? I now have a deeper respect for that profession.
Picture of LightAng3l49 achievements

+11 2. LightAng3l commented 9 years ago

If my life depended on putting it back together I would be dead.
Picture of LaPeste27 achievements

+1 3. LaPeste commented 9 years ago

my 5 years old son : they'd better call two inches tall gnomes to do it.
Picture of Jabafara56 achievements

0 4. Jabafara commented 9 years ago

I'm not a fan of wristwatches, but have admired the craftsmanship of those things for a long time, especially the old ones made with hands/hand tools only :)
Picture of loadrunner54 achievements

0 5. loadrunner commented 9 years ago

I like it they use a special tiny stand for the first springy thing.
Picture of Sulley15 achievements

+4 6. Sulley commented 9 years ago

I have an Oyster Perpetual Datejust, essentially the same workings as the Submariner and this is why.
I bought it 30 years ago. It's been serviced twice by the Rolex Watch Co. during that period. Keeps good time, +- 2 seconds per week depending upon whether I take it off at night or leave it on. Not bad for a mechanical timepiece.
Have dived to 35 metres in Egypt's Red Sea with no qualms and wear it every day.
Not into status symbols but truly love peerless engineering.
Now would cost 3+ times what I paid for it to replace, but I don't care about that either. Not flashy, only stainless steel. A watch, but so well made.

And James Bond had one too so I'm in good company.
Picture of Judge-Jake53 achievements

-4 7. Judge-Jake commented 9 years ago

I really like this video and can't understand why anyone would give me negative feedback for saying so. This place is surreal man :D
Picture of Dubnuh27 achievements

+1 8. Dubnuh commented 9 years ago

This makes the $550 it takes to have it cleaned well worth it. Great video.
Picture of nmchad22 achievements

0 9. nmchad commented 9 years ago

There's always a screw left over!