u/MrBtt

Cerco un occhio esperto in referenze vintage per revisione di un almanacco di orologeria (progetto personale, appunti di famiglia)

Ho completato la stesura di un almanacco tecnico sul collezionismo di orologi. Non scrivo libri di mestiere: questo progetto nasce da anni di ricerche personali e dagli appunti che mio nonno e mio padre hanno accumulato in decenni di passione per l'orologeria. Il risultato è un volume che analizza 20 Maison, con schede tecniche dettagliate per ogni modello: referenza, anni di produzione, range di seriali, varianti di quadrante, calibri e criteri di autenticazione.

Cosa cerco
Mi serve qualcuno con esperienza pratica nell'identificazione dei modelli e nella verifica della coevità delle parti (casse, quadranti, sfere, fondelli, bracciali). Non mi interessano opinioni generiche: cerco correzioni puntuali su dettagli tecnici, soprattutto su referenze pre-1990. Se sai riconoscere un quadrante Gilt originale da una ristampa, se conosci i seriali Rolex a memoria, se hai presente quali lancette montava un Tudor Submariner del '69: sei la persona giusta.

Posso condividere il PDF completo o solo i capitoli che ti interessano. Scrivimi nei commenti o in privato. Grazie a chi vorrà dare una mano.

reddit.com
u/MrBtt — 1 day ago

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u/MrBtt — 3 days ago
▲ 44 r/custommadewatches+3 crossposts

FROM CAD TO REALITY

Been experimenting with high-resolution resin printing for custom watch prototypes lately.

Everything starts as a full CAD model, then goes through multiple print iterations to test proportions, tolerances, surface transitions and small details before eventually moving toward machining.

Mostly focusing on cases, bezels and dial concepts right now. What surprised me the most is how well modern resin printers can reproduce tiny geometries and sharp edges at watch scale, especially for quick design validation and fit testing.

There’s still a lot to refine, but seeing a concept go from a screen to a physical part in a few hours is honestly addictive.

Curious what people here think about resin prototyping as part of the watch design/watchmaking workflow.

u/MrBtt — 2 days ago
▲ 13 r/custommadewatches+3 crossposts

Hey everyone,

Lately I’ve been spending a lot of time improving my CAD workflow for watch design and prototyping, and I recently finished modeling this 42mm dress-style case in Fusion 360 based on a custom project.

What interests me most lately is trying to move beyond simple renders and actually think about how a design would work in real manufacturing — things like tolerances, gasket placement, crystal seating, caseback fitment, crown integration, etc.

For this one I focused a lot on keeping the proportions clean and balanced while also making the internal architecture realistic enough to eventually prototype properly.

I’m also experimenting with different ways of building components in CAD instead of repeating the same workflow every time. I’ve noticed that rethinking the process itself often teaches me more than the final model.

Would genuinely appreciate feedback from people with more experience, especially regarding:
• lug transitions and overall proportions
• bezel thickness/profile
• manufacturability and tolerancing
• anything that immediately looks “wrong” from a watchmaking perspective

I also included a few section views because personally I always find those more interesting than just the exterior renders.

Curious to hear what you guys think.

u/MrBtt — 7 days ago