• Apprentice
    3 Jun 2019, 7:25 p.m.

    I have a circa 2000 Mark XV. I guess it was one of the last to come with
    tritium hands. Obviously the tritium is mostly faded away, but it's cool to
    have the original hands. I took it in for service and they want to replace the
    hands. They say that the tritium is flaking off and is putting the movement at
    risk if it gets in there. Is there some way to stabilize the tritium, or
    should I just let them do it and get new hands on this? I realize it's not a
    collectible watch, it was made in large numbers and mine is very much in
    "worn" condition. What do you think?

  • Master
    3 Jun 2019, 11:19 p.m.

    I guess it comes down to how much you like the original hands and how much you
    would miss them. Whatever damage that may occur to the movement that may be
    caused by flaking tritium falling through the date window into the movement
    likely would be minimal and repairable. It may just need a clean and lube. If
    you like the way it is and won't mind too much if at some point you do need to
    get some tritium cleaned out of your movement, I would keep the original
    hands.

  • Apprentice
    3 Jun 2019, 11:36 p.m.

    Thanks Ben. One thing is that it has somehow started getting very slow and
    then stop working within a few years after service, the last couple of times I
    had it serviced. Could that be because of tritium flakes? It seems like it's
    less reliable than I would expect, even for a 20 year old watch, because it is
    an IWC and it should keep working. Could tritium flakes be the explanation of
    the problem?

  • Master
    4 Jun 2019, 12:18 a.m.

    There are watchmakers out there who can 'stabilize' the tritium from the
    underside of the hands. You may try to find someone who has experience doing
    this. Good luck with your choice.

    Nelson

  • Master
    4 Jun 2019, 1:09 a.m.

    That could be very well be the problem. Even little tiny fragments can get
    into the workings and impeed performance. Another option may replacing the
    hands and reserving the originals - you may be able to have them re-fitted at
    a later date.

  • Master
    4 Jun 2019, 7:13 a.m.

    Just an example handling your tritium issue.
    During a complete service at my local watchmaker, the hands of this watch from
    the 70s were polished, new painted and the crumbled tritium were replaced to
    SL.

    Great work for an fair price.

  • Master
    4 Jun 2019, 5:22 p.m.

    If the Mark XV is from around 2000, I would be surprised that there is Tritium
    as Luminescent material.

    I would expect Superluminova which is in use for more than 2 decades.

    Regards,

    Adrian,

    (alwaysiwc)

  • Apprentice
    4 Jun 2019, 7:22 p.m.

    Thanks to everyone for the replies. First, these are definitely tritium. The
    dial says T-Swiss. I believe that the year I bought it was the year they
    changed from tritium to SL, and mine was among the last that were tritium.
    That's cool and partly why I want to keep it original. I realize this watch is
    never going to be a collectors piece because they were entry-level and made in
    the thousands, but it's still cool to me.

    Thanks for the information. Yes, tritium flaking does explain the mystery of
    why this watch hasn't been running well for the past few years. Even tiny dust
    particles would have a big impact on friction. I'm going to get them to
    replace the hands and keep the old hands. Maybe I can send them out to someone
    to be stabilized and have them put on later. Or maybe not, it's just a watch,
    not a historical artwork. I'll probably buy a new watch soon.

  • Apprentice
    29 Jun 2019, 11:48 p.m.

    I got my Mark XV back a week ago. They really did a beautiful job. The new
    hands look exactly like the originals, except new and not flaking off. It's
    running with perfect timing, a few seconds fast per day, which is ideal. I
    asked them not to polish the case, but they did it anyway, and actually the
    result is great. In short, this 20 year old watch looks basically new. They
    also extended the warranty by 2 years so if anything happens it will be fixed.

    Overall the experience is exactly what I would expect from IWC!

    I think I traumatized the dealer a little bit because I didn't want a new IWC
    box or bag to carry it out. I just wore it. They are very formal about it.
    Which is cool, I get it, especially because their watches are mostly in the
    10k and up price range, so they should have a little ceremony about delivering
    a watch. Anyway, they are great and it was a good experience and makes me
    think of getting another IWC... someday.

  • Master
    30 Jun 2019, 12:03 a.m.

    Fantastic - I love a good ending. Or new beginning...

  • Apprentice
    30 Jun 2019, 12:07 a.m.

    I actually like this watch with its ETA movement, which is no longer used by
    IWC. The ETA should be a great movement because they have produced so many
    millions of them, and IWC did their own improvements to it. I expect it to be
    extremely rugged and long-lasting. I'm happy to be an IWC customer so far and
    I think this watch will last many more decades.

  • Apprentice
    26 Dec 2019, 5:40 p.m.

    I bought a Mk XV one week ago, which is also my 1st IWC, and my holy grail
    since at least 15 years... My XV is also a Tritium dial one (T Swiss Made T),
    with original purcahse date 11/99. I suspect that during a service by the
    previous owner, some of the markers and/or hands have been replaced with SL;
    the only marker with more patina is at 3 and has zero lume vs. the rest that
    have a moderate lume. Oddly both hands seem to have an ever so slightly creamy
    patina but only the hour hand has lost its lume, while the minute hand lume
    matches the whiter markers.

    Anyway congrats on your Tritium Mk XV (which I think is the more rare XV dial
    hence might have slightly more collectible value even if you didn't care about
    such things).

    I was wondering, since I too have a nicely worn look on my not polished case,
    1) what did your overhaul with polish cost at IWC, and 2) do you have regrets
    about them polishing it vs. leaving it original?