1,075 Discussions and CommentsMember since March 22, 2001
I remember a discussion from a long time ago that I cannot find in the archives concerning whether the Aquatimer 3536 (outer rotating bezel) should have lume on the double markers at the 12 or just the dot.
I've seen it both ways.
Lume on only the dot
and Mark Tannenbaum's great photo showing a fully lume dial.
Does anyone know which dial is correct? Or are both correct?
2,996 Discussions and CommentsMember since April 2, 2011Hong Kong,
Hong Kong
interesting... so two (or is it three) different dials distinguishable only by the lume ?
is the difference because of older ref 3536 with Tritium dials, and newer ones with Super Luminova dials (or older ones that went for a re-dial?) ? these would be the discussions: http://www.iwc.com/forum/en/discussion/21067/ http://www.iwc.com/forum/en/discussion/55662/
Whichwatch also had a post earlier, contemplating whether to get the new dial: http://www.iwc.com/forum/en/discussion/25981/
Not sure if this is the same issue...
Regards, Shing | email iwcforme1976 (at) gmail (dot) com time does not change us. it just unfolds us. max frisch. all that really belongs to us is time; even he who has nothing else has that. baltasar gracian.
1,017 Discussions and CommentsMember since July 16, 2001Singapore,
Singapore
shing Wrote:...
Is the difference because of older ref 3536 with Tritium dials, and newer ones with Super Luminova dials (or older ones that went for a re-dial?)?
...
I think you are right and the difference in the luminance of the 12 o'clock markers on the photos shown is due to older dials having a mixture of tritium and superluminova (tritium only for the 12 marker), with the tritium fading over time. One can tell the difference because the faded tritium turns yellow over time whereas the superluminova remains white.
Personally, I prefer the all white superluminova only newer dials, but the not-glowing-in-the-dark-anymore tritium markers at 12 have their own charm, both are correct, the latter is older.
1,017 Discussions and CommentsMember since July 16, 2001Singapore,
Singapore
Forgot to add that you can tell from the markings at the bottom of the dial - the 'Swiss Made' is framed by a 'T' on either side on the older dials with tritium for the 12 o'clock markers.
I've seen it both ways.
Lume on only the dot
and Mark Tannenbaum's great photo showing a fully lume dial.
Does anyone know which dial is correct? Or are both correct?
Thanks,
Larry
The greatest IWC is the one that is inbound."
Last edited: 11 June, 2012 - 20:25
The greatest IWC is the one that is inbound."
is the difference because of older ref 3536 with Tritium dials, and newer ones with Super Luminova dials (or older ones that went for a re-dial?) ? these would be the discussions:
http://www.iwc.com/forum/en/discussion/21067/
http://www.iwc.com/forum/en/discussion/55662/
Whichwatch also had a post earlier, contemplating whether to get the new dial: http://www.iwc.com/forum/en/discussion/25981/
Not sure if this is the same issue...
Regards, Shing | email iwcforme1976 (at) gmail (dot) com
time does not change us. it just unfolds us. max frisch.
all that really belongs to us is time; even he who has nothing else has that. baltasar gracian.
Last edited: 8 December, 2012 - 16:07
I think you are right and the difference in the luminance of the 12 o'clock markers on the photos shown is due to older dials having a mixture of tritium and superluminova (tritium only for the 12 marker), with the tritium fading over time. One can tell the difference because the faded tritium turns yellow over time whereas the superluminova remains white.
Personally, I prefer the all white superluminova only newer dials, but the not-glowing-in-the-dark-anymore tritium markers at 12 have their own charm, both are correct, the latter is older.
D.
Cheers, Dirk
Dirk