The strap looks perfect for the watch.Wearing the Bubbleback for the fifth day straight. I'm really liking this Veblenist strap (Faro). I think it may stay on there permanently.
View attachment 527580
The strap looks perfect for the watch.Wearing the Bubbleback for the fifth day straight. I'm really liking this Veblenist strap (Faro). I think it may stay on there permanently.
View attachment 527580
Pretty much all the stainless is soft for clean machining and high finish. You just did a Rockwell test with that spring loaded point. That point would have hurt most anything snapping free.On a separate note, I'm a little pissed about this. Dinged the inside edge of a lug when swapping straps on the Big Eye over the weekend (springbar slipped off my Bergeon tool). How the F soft is this stainless? That ding is from the springbar, not tool damage. I won't be using pointed tipped Sinn springbars on this watch any more...
View attachment 527581
View attachment 527582
I've heard countless times that springbars can't damage 316L. Here's 100% evidence to the contrary. Lesson learned. I'll only use flat tipped springbars in the future. Luckily it's not noticeable with a strap installed.Pretty much all the stainless is soft for clean machining and high finish. You just did a Rockwell test with that spring loaded point. That point would have hurt most anything snapping free.
All I can do on removal of 2-piece is to put bits of low adhesion painter tape on exterior of lugs, but on install I am able to put some on inside against slippage or tool whoopsie....frankly, one of the reasons I stick with 1-piece is with less messing with bars I have less chance of damage. LOVE watches with drilled lugs for frequent swapping.
Same as a 420J2 dive knife, 316L is notable for corrosion resistance and not hardness, and can scratch/dent pretty danged easily, especially with impact in a small area. Springbar tips are likely always harder.
I doubt you have done much draw back the bow and let arrow fly with most others, and that very small hard tip also happened to hit at a thin corner with no supporting metal around impact point to share the load and prevent collapse....all I can say is good thing that exact thing did not happen to a Ti or gold case or you'd REALLY be singing the blues. I don't think there was a real lesson to be learned as not even tape would have helped much considering what hit, and where....it was just a confluence of everything going south at once, and I hate it for you.Agreed...
I probably swap straps more than anyone else here by 10 fold. I've had the occasional springbar slip, but never so much as left a notable blemish when doing so. That's why this circumstance is a bit of an eyebrow raiser for me. Plenty of people here have seen my watches. They are pretty blemish free, even though I change straps almost daily and never tape the lugs. I'd chalk it up to the hardness and shape of the Sinn springbars, but they've never left a mark on any other watch in my collection.
Yep, just a case of everything adding up and going south. Not sure how the springbar even exited the front side of the lug as I had rearward pressure on the strap. The area isn't visible with a strap installed. It just irks me that I did this to a new watch that had only been worn a handful of times.I doubt you have done much draw back the bow and let arrow fly with most others, and that very small hard tip also happened to hit at a thin corner with no supporting metal around impact point to share the load and prevent collapse....all I can say is good thing that exact thing did not happen to a Ti or gold case or you'd REALLY be singing the blues. I don't think there was a real lesson to be learned as not even tape would have helped much considering what hit, and where....it was just a confluence of everything going south at once, and I hate it for you.
Geez, buy the cheap spring bars, not diamond tipped ones.On a separate note, I'm a little pissed about this. Dinged the inside edge of a lug when swapping straps on the Big Eye over the weekend (springbar slipped off my Bergeon tool). How the F soft is this stainless? That ding is from the springbar, not tool damage. I won't be using pointed tipped Sinn springbars on this watch any more...
View attachment 527585
View attachment 527582
Apparently so. Damn Germans...lol.Geez, buy the cheap spring bars, not diamond tipped ones.
Enter your email address to join: