Legit 60s Seamaster?

Dec 10, 2014,15:23 PM
 

Dear all


I could use a little help with identifying whether the following piece looks legit:

Advertised as a 1966 Seamaster, calibre 562, solid yellow gold, reference number 230 26 230.
The ref number does not show up on the Omega vintage database.

The Seamaster script looks correct for the stated year.

The dial has some spots between 6 and 7, which makes it look more authentic to me.

I am however worried about the broken cross-hairs, shouldn't they be continuous?

Also, although the hands are lumed there is no "T".

Any thoughts would be highly appreciated!























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I would love to

 
 By: Salamanca : December 10th, 2014-16:36
see the movement inside and the dial looks redone.

General rule ...

 
 By: nilomis : December 11th, 2014-03:51
To determine if a watch is "real", we need: - Picture of the movement - Picture of the inside of the case back - Macro shots of the dial and hands Otherwise, it will be a wild guess. Cheers, Nilo

It looks authentic to my eyes. Not all crosshairs . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 11th, 2014-12:05
. . . were uninterrupted. I have a ref 166.0002 Seamaster with a similar pattern, sourced from the grandson of the original owner. Unfortunately, I can't share an image as there isn't one in my files; it's currently at my watchmaker's for seconds hand rep... 

Some more info and pics

 
 By: marinder : December 11th, 2014-13:10
Dear all Thanks so far for your opinions! Dr. No, the information about the broken crosshairs would be reassuring, I also found other 166.001s with broken crosshairs: I today got 2 more pics from the seller, one from the caseback (although a pretty bad p...  

The correct reference would be BA 166.0001 . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 12th, 2014-01:21
. . . and while it was introduced in 1962 (according to Omega's own reference site), it might well have continued in production until 1966 or later, so there's no real issue at stake. It looks ok to me, excepting the proviso regarding hour and (especially... 

I guess it boils down to the hands question...

 
 By: marinder : December 12th, 2014-02:38
as the BA 166.0001 entry in the Omega database states the following for the dial: Dial Metal, with metal "stick" hands and hand-rivetted gold hour markers. No picture of the dial though. Does that information mean that BA 166.0001 were *always* produced w... 

I can't say for sure about the style of hands . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 12th, 2014-11:03
. . . but it's a fair bet that stick hands would've been employed throughout the production run. Otto Frei still has gold-finished hands for the cal 562, so it's worth a try checking their website. As for pricing discussion on the forum regarding a partic...