Types Of Watch Glass - Which Is Best? Acrylic vs Mineral vs Sapphire Watch Glass Comparison

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • In this video, I compare the different types of watch glass, to see which of the main types of watch crystals is the best watch glass out there. I'll be comparing acrylic glass vs mineral glass vs sapphire glass, along with the properties of the respective watch glass types.
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Komentáře • 508

  • @EliMeadAZ
    @EliMeadAZ Před 4 lety +355

    If you impact your watch hard enough to shatter the sapphire you're going to likely have more problems than just a broken crystal anyway.
    Sapphire still remains king for me.

    • @Sakura-bs1rk
      @Sakura-bs1rk Před 2 lety +1

      😂😂😂 True

    • @tezzanewton
      @tezzanewton Před 2 lety +1

      The only crystal I’ve damaged is sapphire. I chipped the corner of a box crystal when working on the brakes on my car.

    • @yourface4248
      @yourface4248 Před 2 lety +16

      @@tezzanewton always take off all bracelets and rings when working on machinery. it is the safe thing to do.

    • @tezzanewton
      @tezzanewton Před 2 lety +1

      @@yourface4248 I don’t wear bracelets or rings, I didn’t even mention them. I have 35 years experience on the tools as a tradesman so I probably don’t need your silly advice.

    • @yourface4248
      @yourface4248 Před 2 lety +29

      @@tezzanewton a wrist watch is pretty much a bracelet.

  • @joaschristian757
    @joaschristian757 Před 4 lety +1037

    Glass is glass, and scratches at a level 6 with deeper grooves at a level 7

    • @Eray2007
      @Eray2007 Před 4 lety +7

      Lmao

    • @MrNascar1111
      @MrNascar1111 Před 4 lety +19

      Perfect I was looking for this comment

    • @alex.hleconte6007
      @alex.hleconte6007 Před 3 lety +18

      Actuelly sapphire glass scratches at 8

    • @rehakmate
      @rehakmate Před 3 lety +35

      @@alex.hleconte6007 Sapphire glass (real ones that are used in watches not some phone glass trying to be sapphire) scratches above 9 on the mohs scale.

    • @watchandjewelryloft4713
      @watchandjewelryloft4713 Před 3 lety +7

      It's not a linear scale though. Look at this link for a better understanding of the scale. Although diamond is a 10 and sapphire is a 9, diamond is many times harder than sapphire. Being in the watch repair field and having some jewelry repair experience I've been able to observe this as well.
      4cs.gia.edu/en-us/blog/more-than-mohs-scale-gem-durability/

  • @hugohutten1497
    @hugohutten1497 Před 4 lety +431

    It is really hard to shatter glass when it lies flat on a surface. I think the result will differ when there is a space between the glass and a surface. This is also the case with watches

    • @zakofrx
      @zakofrx Před 4 lety +34

      Also hitting it with a large surface will cause little damage while hitting it with a metal punch will break it.
      A fast and hard hit with a small surface area does the job.

    • @starkid24
      @starkid24 Před 2 lety

      Agreed.

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zakofrx Also hitting it on a plywood desk instead of... concrete.

    • @irishRocker1
      @irishRocker1 Před 2 lety +6

      @@zakofrx he used a screwdriver so it wasnt that. It was that it was flat and supported as Hugo mentioned

    • @afoster1621
      @afoster1621 Před rokem

      Read my mind buddy, I was thinking the exact same thing and comment too and yours was #1 comment !

  • @Skybusdriver
    @Skybusdriver Před 3 lety +82

    Sapphire is the way to go, I’ve got scratches all over my metal watch band from day to day manual task, but the face of my watch still looking new!

    • @Totemparadox
      @Totemparadox Před 3 měsíci +2

      Agreed. The only reason to go with anything softer is job requirements like NASA requiring "crystal" that doesn't shatter into billion little pieces. Like another person said, if you crack sapphire then the watch itself is most likely highly damaged as well from the impact.

  • @aussie8114
    @aussie8114 Před 3 lety +34

    A sapphire crystal can be had for about $15. However the average AR coating can cause an unsightly blue hue so sapphire is not necessarily always a preferred choice. Sapphire with a high quality clear AR is obviously desirable.

    • @marekhudac8390
      @marekhudac8390 Před 2 lety +8

      Not always, but often i tend to like the AR blue hue..

  • @garethhanna9173
    @garethhanna9173 Před 4 lety +203

    If the Chinese can use sapphire on £50 watches there is no excuse for Seiko still using 'hardlex' on £300 models. I considered the Seiko Presage until I discovered it had hardlex, unlike its discontinued Japanese Domestic Market predecessor the SARB.

    • @HonestWatchReviewsHWR
      @HonestWatchReviewsHWR Před 4 lety +26

      Totally agree. That's why I bought a Seiko Presage homage instead. It's cheaper and comes with sapphire crystal too.

    • @richardc316
      @richardc316 Před 4 lety +10

      I was about to comment exactly the same thing. You've already done it for me. A piece of sapphire really isn't that expensive and should be in all watched over £150.

    • @NathanChisholm041
      @NathanChisholm041 Před 4 lety +6

      Seiko will never use it on their lower end watches! That's one of the reasons Seiko blows. My San Martin eats any Seiko in its price range and even the more expensive ones...

    • @garethhanna9173
      @garethhanna9173 Před 4 lety +7

      @&Ö& Paneristi Orient are owned by Seiko, which makes it even more unnaceptable.

    • @1701spacecadet
      @1701spacecadet Před 4 lety

      I agree 100%

  • @ziksy6460
    @ziksy6460 Před 3 lety +31

    I find that I bump my wrist against doors/tables/walls more often than I'd like to admit. So it's nice to know that my sapphire crystal isn't gonna get scratched. These days, even if I'm buying a relatively entry-level watch, a lack of sapphire is a deal-breaker.

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Před 2 lety +1

      bumping is impact.

    • @notme756
      @notme756 Před rokem

      @@goku445 it can still scratch though when hitting something harder and dragging/scraping slightly.. and like was said in the video- you dont really have to worry too much about impact resistance, unless your expecting to drop it from 4 feet onto concrete or having large objects fall onto you- you would be tough pressed to shatter either mineral or sapphire in most use cases

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Před rokem +1

      @@notme756 true. I bump my gshock all the time. I have it since almost 2 years and it's only got recently a slight scratch barely visible. It is mineral. That's good enough to me.

    • @rapajuoppo7393
      @rapajuoppo7393 Před rokem

      @@goku445 impact doesnt do anything to quarz, I abused my candino with 20kg subwoofer magnet and it always worked after demagnetizing

    • @justafanmarvel9669
      @justafanmarvel9669 Před rokem

      Exactly what you just described is what caused my watch with a mineral crystal to chip.. a bump on a door frame.. now I'm wondering if I should replace it with acrylic or Sapphire

  • @carlosbornes
    @carlosbornes Před 4 lety +20

    Great video just a quick comment regarding the shattering of sapphire. The way you tested is not fare. In a watch, the glass is not fully supported as it is when you place it on top of the table. In a watch the glasses are support only at the edges and when you hit it in the middle the sapphire is more prone to shatter because is more rigid so it can not contract to dissipate the energy like the plastic. When you support all the sapphire surface you are not forming any specific area of stress as the energy is dissipated equally to the table.

    • @carlosbornes
      @carlosbornes Před 4 lety

      @Mother Algorithm so how to you test if it shatters?

  • @BushCampingTools
    @BushCampingTools Před 4 lety +16

    Great summary! I would like to add that the transparency of certain mineral glasses can vary greatly depending upon what constitutes the makeup of the glass alloy. For example: the Seiko Hardlex crystals (even the old ones dating back to the 70's-like on the SEIKO Sports series) and the Citizen PROMASTER series of eco drive watches, have very optically transparent "crystals". I don't know about other watch brands. The example you show for sure looks to have a tinge of green, just as you say it looks like ordinary window glass-maybe hardened of course but you could check by examining it under polarized light. Certainly as a diver using a mineral crystal is a better choice as it is tougher than the Sapphire. I guess besides that, wearing a watch diving the watch case itself is going to get banged up for sure-unless you only dive in a bath tub LOL. To help increase shatter resistance and certainly scratch resistance, i installed some custom made (I made them) watch crystal protectors made from high quality tablet screen protectors. i've had two of these installed; one for over a year (on a SEIKO Prospex 200m diver-baby Tuna actually) and one just for the last 3 months on Citizen BN 0176-08E 300m diver, I've accidentally hit the crystal several times and I'm certain the protectors have saved me either breaking the crystal and or definitely preventing scratches. The upshot is, when the protector gets manky you can simply remove it and put another one onto the still brand new watch crystal LOL. I also reviewed these watches and how to install such protectors.

  • @karellen00
    @karellen00 Před 3 lety +13

    Of all 3 types I prefer acrylic, of all my watches it is the material that looks more transparent, and without even needing a coating, and doesn't show fingerprints. Sapphire looks really close, especially when it has anti reflective coating, but only when you just cleaned it, the fingerprints really pop with that material making it in real world generally less clear. It also weights a lot more, it's pretty noticeable the difference on the wrist! Plain old glass to me seems the worst, it cuts away contrast more than the other two materials, but anyway I have to admit that the thick hardlex crystal seiko uses on their divers looks really good, really close to sapphire in transparency but less susceptible to fingerprints.

  • @jansavli4049
    @jansavli4049 Před 2 lety +15

    just noticed that at the end of every sentence Ben does this thing with his lips, like he pressess them together. and it's always in the same way!! it doesn't bother me or anything but I just can't unsee it now :D
    anyone else see that?

    • @raiezy
      @raiezy Před 2 lety +2

      Noticed it too 🤣

    • @Totemparadox
      @Totemparadox Před 3 měsíci +1

      Thanks... Can't unsee it now 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @Dionysor
    @Dionysor Před 3 lety +4

    Cheers for the upload. I did not expect my Casio M170TD to have sapphire glass so its good to know i can go ham with it.

  • @StuntpilootStef
    @StuntpilootStef Před 4 lety +26

    You missed a very important aspect about acrylic. It isn't just a way to cut costs, some expensive watches have it deliberately because it can be shaped any way you like very thin and offers much better visibility of the dial. It's the reason your Junkers Bauhaus and the Max Bill have acrylic. Omega offers the speedmaster with a choice of acrylic and sapphire to this day.

    • @Alex-qb7gt
      @Alex-qb7gt Před 3 lety +1

      even rolex used in past time plexiglass for some models

    • @StuntpilootStef
      @StuntpilootStef Před 3 lety +2

      @@Alex-qb7gt That's when everyone used plexi, Einstein. They don't anymore. But they still refuse to use AR coating for some reason.

    • @retardinho5048
      @retardinho5048 Před 2 lety +2

      @@StuntpilootStef They don’t use AR because it makes their watches less blingy and less expensive looking. Wrap your head around that absurd logic.

  • @mostirreverent
    @mostirreverent Před 2 lety +6

    Acrylic will let more frequencies of light through than almost any material, more than glass even. The molding process can change some of its light properties, though it can be machined and polished from sheet stock as well. Also, the stock used for non-molding purposes (the ones who held up) are of a better grade than those used for molding.
    I have found some anti-reflective coating on sapphire at some angles can make it look almost cloudy

  • @jimizuri
    @jimizuri Před 3 lety +2

    Clear and concise explanation and great broadcasting! Thank you. Definitely worth considering sapphire.

  • @peterclarke3990
    @peterclarke3990 Před 3 lety +3

    Great review Ben. Short, simple and to the point. We'll done. Look forward to more informative vids from you.

  • @jamesdoherty97
    @jamesdoherty97 Před 3 měsíci

    Brilliant review! Very helpful to me. Thank you.

  • @JJ-kz4zq
    @JJ-kz4zq Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks so much for doing this video. Great content!

  • @Trex100
    @Trex100 Před 4 lety +2

    I enjoy your well-researched videos Ben.

  • @milutinbresjanac7525
    @milutinbresjanac7525 Před 3 lety

    Great advices, information ratio and I guess help! Keep going, very very good chanel!

  • @RandyRyanCandy
    @RandyRyanCandy Před 4 lety +4

    1st off I love your videos! I'm kinda perplexed in how underrated you are...

  • @FeralInferno
    @FeralInferno Před 4 lety +5

    Sapphire is also a really great shoot 'em up for the PC Engine. Very shiny visuals and difficult to break.

  • @KathleenMayTSurla-zx9ft
    @KathleenMayTSurla-zx9ft Před 3 lety +1

    Thank You for making this video at least now when I buy a watch I’ll be more knowledgeable in different types of quality of glass.

  • @jimcrickmore1347
    @jimcrickmore1347 Před rokem

    Hi Ben great stuff basic & too the point easy to follow i now know what i want to order cheers

  • @thistleclockworks1292
    @thistleclockworks1292 Před 4 lety +4

    Ben, well done on this video. Thanks for the research and detail. One thing I might add. While you’re spot on about selecting watches with sapphire if given the choice, remember it’s so easy to have your mineral crystal replaced. ...or even take your watch hobby to the next level and learn to to do yourself. I had a scratched Hardlex crystal replaced and it made a 90’s watch brand new again. I’m looking forward to your next vid.

  • @TheTownWatch
    @TheTownWatch Před 4 lety

    Very informative and helpful video! Thank you!

  • @menandroplan1554
    @menandroplan1554 Před 4 lety +4

    I wholeheartedly agree with sapphire on higher end watches except for the Speedmaster. Ive had the sapphire and hesalite version, and the hesalite version, aesthetically, looks sooooo much better on it.

  • @-insert-
    @-insert- Před rokem +2

    A few years back I was walking down a sidewalk and my wrist hit a light pole, along the bezel perpendicular to the sapphire. I didn't even hit it particularly hard yet crystal shattered. My take away was that sapphire can withstand a hard knock straight on but hit it on the side and it's toast.

  • @rainerbuechse6923
    @rainerbuechse6923 Před 3 lety

    Excellent overview, thanks!

  • @butre.
    @butre. Před rokem +2

    acrylic for me. they're easy to make look new again, and if they get too bad they're easy to replace. not to mention, I could've bought good flat sapphire for the same price as my aggressive double dome acrylic
    and fyi diamond selectors don't test hardness, they test thermal conductivity.

  • @Robozgraggi
    @Robozgraggi Před 4 lety +5

    I'm an oddball on this matter. It's either acrylic or sapphire for me. I scratched and smashed several mineral crystals on watches, to me they're the worst of both worlds. However I never managed to smash acrylic and buffing out scratches is a matter of just a few minutes. Perfect for beater watches you don't have to care about.

  • @Brainman_2331
    @Brainman_2331 Před 4 lety +5

    Learned something new today. Thanks, it was a very informative video.

  • @robertnorth1681
    @robertnorth1681 Před 2 lety +4

    I've retired more watches because scratches to the glass affected the appearance of the dial than any other reason. When I started buying better, mechanical watches, sapphire became the choice, and I have not been disappointed.

  • @xandercloet7467
    @xandercloet7467 Před 4 lety +33

    i have a watch with a sapphire watch glass.
    i've had it for 7 years now and there is literally no scratch on the watch.

    • @appalachiangunman9589
      @appalachiangunman9589 Před 3 lety +4

      If you’d had a mineral crystal you would have probably gotten the first scratch within a week or two.

    • @GicN
      @GicN Před 3 lety

      @@appalachiangunman9589 true

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Před 2 lety

      @@GicN I've had a gshock for 2 years and zero scratch on it (mineral). I use it daily.

  • @Foxtrot-jr5qu
    @Foxtrot-jr5qu Před 4 lety +6

    I have Seiko Samurai with hardlex which I own since 2018 (bought it for around 300$) and it's one of my daily watches and so far I haven't scratched it. There's no doubt that sapphire is superior but depending on the model and of course the price it isn't that much of a deal breaker for me (especially if that particular watch model is on a big sale like -30-50% of the retail price) and if I really want to I can always buy a sapphire crystal for around 40$ if that's really necessary. The rest of my watches have sapphire crystals and I also have Vostok Amphibia (that has acrylic crystal), which I recently bought and also wear from time to time with no issues so far. I think it all depends on what are you doing while wearing your watch. A friend of mine is a car mechanic and he's wearing a Victorinox with sapphire and although the crystal looks like new, the rest of the watch looks like hell so there's that to.

    • @gimiked8685
      @gimiked8685 Před rokem +1

      Yea I would be wearing either no watch, a gshock, or another cheap durable watch doing work like that. I had a gshock when I was in the military, as work was not easy on gear, or me for that matter. I take off my watch if I'm doing yard work and swap it out for a casio of some type. I usually wear a seiko, citizen, or micro brand. Entry level stuff. But I still don't want to be buying one every year or two. The casio is 20-30 bucks. I can afford to grab a new one every year.

  • @vesselinkrastev
    @vesselinkrastev Před rokem +2

    I've never actually managed to scratch any of my mineral crystal watches. I'm an office worker, mind you, so I'm not doing anything crazy with my watches. The cases and bracelets get worn out from general banging against tables and door frames but the crystals look pristine to my eyes. Once I banged an affordable Casio pretty hard against a lamp post. The case received a rather deep groove but the glass was just fine.

  • @Pandorasoul
    @Pandorasoul Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for your video ! I recently bought an used Cartier Santos on sale, its almos 20 years old and the crystal is impecable, looks as translucent and clear like the first day it left the store. If the vendor had told me the crystal was a new replacement Id have believed him. Thanks again for your informative video !

  • @soulfulfool
    @soulfulfool Před 3 lety +3

    I got a watch with mineral glass for like 2 years and yes it has 2 miner scratches, but overall its good. It's my daily watch

  • @shood7043
    @shood7043 Před 3 lety

    Great video! Once I discovered sapphire I never looked back. All of my sapphires look brand new. My others....not so much

  • @Miguel_GM
    @Miguel_GM Před 4 lety +7

    Great comparative. Well explained. Thanks.

  • @SniperKing029
    @SniperKing029 Před 2 lety +3

    Yeah, a sapphire watch crystal has never cracked on my wrist. But I have scratched, chipped, and cracked mineral glass. Although, My son shattered my Seamaster’s sapphire crystal on a tile floor 😖

  • @lorenzogiancristofaro9721
    @lorenzogiancristofaro9721 Před 4 lety +17

    Sapphire crystal is the most resistant to scratches and least resistant to impact, acrylic is the exact opposite. Mineral glass can scratch or crack fairly easily, is relatively expensive to replace and quite difficult to polish. In my experience mineral glass combines the worst aspects of the other 2 options.

    • @m4t7eo
      @m4t7eo Před rokem

      This is kind of an oversemplification, and underestimation of mineral glass. While it is easier to scratch then sapphire, acrylic can get scratched by just looking at it. I have a swatch that gets cloudy by just being worn, due to contact with sleeves.

  • @vBDKv
    @vBDKv Před 4 lety +2

    Mineral is my prefered. It's relatively cheap but can also withstand a beating. It can look a little "foggy" at certain angles though.

  • @runningwithshemp
    @runningwithshemp Před 4 lety

    I'm a newbie to watch thing, last year I bought a discontinued Marathon Nav and well overall it's excellent but I do with it had sapphire over acrylic crystal as with how easily it scratched up. Of course the updated version has a sapphire crystal hence the reason what I got was discontinued.

  • @F3z07
    @F3z07 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for the concise, informative video! Which watch are you wearing here? Thanks for your time!

  • @Feynman981
    @Feynman981 Před 4 lety +7

    I like domed crystal watches. So, I prefere Acrylic or domed Saphire. I try to avoid Mineral glass at all because it's usually just flat and you can't remove scratches.

  • @AliasEveWatches
    @AliasEveWatches Před 4 lety +13

    When you ran the blade on the acrylic glass in the intro i was like 😱😱😱
    That Blue Auto (The 5th) you showed in the sapphire part is beautiful!

  • @12joemangarasimanungkalit39

    Thanks for your video, very Usefull

  • @youhuizhang1447
    @youhuizhang1447 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello! What is the Chronograph shown at 5:40 of the video (the one on the right)? Thank you very much!

  • @sugarnads
    @sugarnads Před 3 lety

    I ordered a cheeeap casio digital and a nice looking casio dress watch coz you reminded me how good the low end digitals are...

  • @suegoulding1341
    @suegoulding1341 Před 2 lety

    VERY well explained!

  • @tetemix
    @tetemix Před 4 lety +20

    Very nice video. Just a slight comment, you can “polish” mineral crystal, it is just not as easy as with acrylic to polish but the result is pretty good when restoring a watch ! no need to change it. This is quite useful for hard to find domed mineral crystal.

    • @TooSeriously
      @TooSeriously Před 2 lety

      @M K super new to this hobby....but what in God's green earth is a multi thousand dollar Seamaster doing without Sapphire !?!?

    • @m4t7eo
      @m4t7eo Před rokem +1

      @@TooSeriously You'd be shocked to know that the base speedmaster (5k+) has an acrylic crystal.

    • @peteclegg1578
      @peteclegg1578 Před 8 měsíci

      You can of course polish the scratches out of anything other than diamond - which doesn't scratch. If any watch crystal scratches then those scratches can also be polished out. A Dremel with a buffing wheel and a small tube of diamond paste will make short work of it. Do not be a slave to the scratch.

  • @madaboutvoice
    @madaboutvoice Před 3 lety

    Hi Ben, what''s that watch you're holding and pointing to near the end at 9:49-9:53?

  • @IbtsaamChughtai
    @IbtsaamChughtai Před 2 lety +1

    I have watch with sapphire glass from the past 7 years and right now it is in my hand like brand new.
    Although I used it all the time.

  • @EfieldHfield_377
    @EfieldHfield_377 Před 4 lety +5

    Thx for the video I always wanted to know. For my personal experience I have had a Seiko with Hardex for 7 years and another Seiko with Sappier much older - with Sapphire (I think - its a bit on the shinny side) about 25 years old. Both I wear regular, both no issues, no scratches. I have, dear I say, a preference for the Hardex - does not have the shinny reflective - but I am just a novice.

  • @gregwalker4236
    @gregwalker4236 Před 4 lety

    nice review, subscribed. as you say, it all depends on the watch and intended use.. there are no bad choices here, imo. now, if you drop a watch on a hard surface, you are likely to damage the innards as well as the crystal, so be careful with a watch you care about. my old wind up rolex from the seventies was dropped and put a crack in the crystal and now you cannot set the time--the whole crown can be pulled out of the watch--but if you wait for the time to match what's on the watch, you can wind and wear!

  • @kevinbaker2282
    @kevinbaker2282 Před 3 lety

    Hi I have a watch that I am told the battery can only be changed by removing the glass do you have any vids showing how this is done or know of any

  • @suman5492
    @suman5492 Před 10 měsíci

    I bought two Casio Enticers, model MTP V002L-7B2UDF and MTP E171L-5EVDF. Both have mineral glass and I waited a very long time to have them. They are very hard to get as they are not easily available their stock reload take ages . I don't like scratches on my watch. Can I use tempered glass protectors on them?

  • @justme7920
    @justme7920 Před 4 lety +83

    BenRigEverything 😀

  • @renepoche4171
    @renepoche4171 Před 4 lety +1

    Good video here. Thanks for the information!

  • @rickjason215
    @rickjason215 Před 3 lety +14

    Sapphire. I have old watches with Sapphire and the crystal looks brand new.

  • @vegasbob0075
    @vegasbob0075 Před 4 lety +2

    I have a Timex Expedition what would it cost for a sapphire glass to replace the acrylic crystal ?

  • @vgarrentv7046
    @vgarrentv7046 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this video

  • @cubink6007
    @cubink6007 Před 3 lety +2

    I have a sapphire Citezen rn, haved it for 8 months now, really good, you can see clearly through it, unlike negative digital watches like that ca53wf, it has plastic screen, so you can't really see through it, thah watch would be much better if it haved sapphire glass. And yes, it has no backlights.

  • @4godandcountry663
    @4godandcountry663 Před 2 lety +1

    Not that I’m a a Invicta fan, however after looking into there FlameFusion Crystal it seems to be a nice alternative. I fix watches etc and they seem to have a good glass

  • @allan2098
    @allan2098 Před 4 lety +2

    Not much mention of IR coatings. I have seen several mid-range watches like Omega and
    Tag have the coating on sapphire crystals and although the crystal doesn’t scratch, you can see hairline scratches on the surface where the IR coating has been scratched. Rolex doesn’t have the coating so there are no tiny scratches but their crystal is VERY reflective.

  • @amenhotep7704
    @amenhotep7704 Před rokem

    Congrats, you gained yourself a new subscriber.

  • @darrensmith6999
    @darrensmith6999 Před 4 lety

    Can you tell me anything about Invictas Flame Fusion is this Sapphire? i have several Invictas with this and it is incredibly tough!

  • @TheStoyanbahchevanov
    @TheStoyanbahchevanov Před 4 lety +2

    Hi, awesome channel. I found you recently, great content, useful and educational. Do you know more about Stuhrling Original brand, can you make please a video. I have a watch from them and I don't know about them. Thanks. Cheers.

  • @echo7013
    @echo7013 Před rokem

    Great video very informative

  • @canturkcivelek4896
    @canturkcivelek4896 Před 3 lety

    Where does ion-x glass used on Apple Watched fit in this category? Thank You 😊

  • @Nonexistanthuman
    @Nonexistanthuman Před rokem

    I was not expecting to see you with hair as a new subscriber, thanks for sharing!!

  • @antman674
    @antman674 Před 2 lety

    Question: how do they get the sapphire glass to be clear in the lab? Rather than blue.
    Also, when it comes to impact resistance in my personal experience, Ive shattered two mineral crystals. One was a timex expidition I bought specifically for a camping trip and the glass broke on that trip so unfortunately I only got to enjoy that nice little field watch once and has been sitting in a drawer ever since being that its cheaper to replace the whole watch than just the glass. The other mineral crystal I shattered was an eco-drive that took a light fall off the bathroom counter and produced a clam shapped chip at the edge. Mineral crystal: 0 for 2. My Hamilton Khaki King with sapphire crystal however has been my daily wear for 3 years now and no scratches and no chips. It is domed though which may add to its strength? I dont know, but seems to be strong stuff and I know its been knocked around a bit (not to mention withstanding some nights where I had a bit too much to drink!). Sapphire: 1 in 0.

  • @fakiirification
    @fakiirification Před 4 lety +1

    acrylic crystal has a cool property in that it can be easily polished back to like-new condition with the same sort of sandpaper and rubbing compound you use to restore car headlight lenses. so minor scuffs and scratches from daily beater service can be polished off when they start to interfere with your ability to read it.

  • @ralfrufus3691
    @ralfrufus3691 Před rokem

    The most informative, most telling part of your video was when you tried to shatter the sapphire glass.
    I also never had any problems with sapphire glass on my watches.

  • @zino6661
    @zino6661 Před rokem

    I have several Hardlex Seiko, couple Casio G-Shock, and Citizen mineral Crystal. They all scratch no matter how I baby them. The mineral Crystal on Casio is so reflective I had to stick a matt protective film on the glass in order to be able to tell the time

  • @thetimewhack
    @thetimewhack Před 4 lety

    If u could get hands on seiko 5 snxf07.....and a review probably comparimg with snxs79...it would be amazing..
    And u get 2 of the finest seikos that i adore

  • @christopherjohnson4276

    Great video!

  • @erizzle67
    @erizzle67 Před 2 lety +1

    You can buy protectors (like with phones and smart watches). You can buy specific Casio models, plastic or glass.

  • @ivosuter6932
    @ivosuter6932 Před 5 měsíci

    Hesalite is a cell cast cross linked acrylic. It features better chemical resistance than normal acrylic. In the 70s it was state of the art for watch cristals. Today it is not used often anymore. However, some people prefer its warm touch.

  • @CoreyBrass
    @CoreyBrass Před 2 lety

    I love acrylic crystals on watches. I love the look of them.

  • @gabrielwong1833
    @gabrielwong1833 Před 4 lety

    I wonder why CWC uses Hesalite/Acrylic for their watches? Maybe there's a higher chance of impacts vs. scratching when used in the military? Thoughts?

  • @nicvallecillo7557
    @nicvallecillo7557 Před rokem

    Thanks, I just recently got a Hamilton day date pilot - like in interstellar, and am so worried I’ll scratch it lol. It’s sapphire so I guess I just have to accept it will do it’s job.

  • @dawidp8048
    @dawidp8048 Před 4 lety +4

    Amazing video! Greetings from Poland :)

  • @juniorjohnson5961
    @juniorjohnson5961 Před 4 lety

    Keep up the good work 👍

  • @barryjames3354
    @barryjames3354 Před rokem

    great presentation

  • @dennisjaros3345
    @dennisjaros3345 Před 4 lety +5

    What about flame fusion glass from invicta?

  • @loydlamberson8942
    @loydlamberson8942 Před rokem

    Great Video! Now the real question......................what watch are you wearing? I am looking to get a Field Watch and I believe yours is one?

  •  Před 3 lety +3

    You should actually put the glasses into a watch when trying to shatter them, as laying them on a flat surface gives them support. When in a watch, the impact will push against the glass and allow that force to be distributed along the edge through the center. This stress could result in a crack, or breaking of the glass.
    (Edit:) I've just now seen the other guys' comment 😂

  • @GabrielGGabGattringer
    @GabrielGGabGattringer Před 4 lety +15

    I've 17 watches in a range of €10 to €400. Wear each of these watches regularly. Havn't achieved to catch any glass on my watches from Casio G-Shock Square (shouldn't scratch at all, right?) to Timex, Junkers, to Seiko. So what's the fuss all about? Hardlex is totally fine IMHO. Sapphire is a bit more expensive.

    • @erregi4946
      @erregi4946 Před 4 lety +2

      You can find real sapphire at less than 2€ shipped on AliExpress

    • @ivdee
      @ivdee Před 2 lety

      @@erregi4946 can’t seem to find them for that price

  • @tontonpadilla5979
    @tontonpadilla5979 Před 4 lety

    pls make a video about the curren 8106 watch. give the pro's and con's of the watch. btw... i love your vids. new sub here❤️

  • @G1NZOU
    @G1NZOU Před 3 lety +4

    I personally don't mind mineral glass (Seiko's hardlex I like even more), especially on a dive watch, it's a little better at not shattering if it get's bashed against something than Sapphire is, which in a dive watch is good, better to get your crystal scratched but still intact so you can replace it when it's dry than suffer a shattered crystal at depth and have a much more expensive repair for water damage.

    • @notme756
      @notme756 Před rokem +2

      ya but i mean... do you actually dive with a mechanical/quartz watch? ive never heard of anyone in this day and age doing that, myself and 99% of others use dive computers with more functionality

    • @otsoni03
      @otsoni03 Před 9 měsíci

      @@notme756 I sometimes do and many others as well. It is good idea to have a diver's watch with a depth meter as a back up: czcams.com/video/WCAn4c2eTqA/video.html

    • @thegorn
      @thegorn Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah because we are all going diving in harsh marine environments with our collections of dive watches lmfao

  • @neelkanthkolambkar8805
    @neelkanthkolambkar8805 Před 9 měsíci

    Nice video sir

  • @tony2169
    @tony2169 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you

  • @henrycharles2489
    @henrycharles2489 Před 4 lety +10

    What is the reference number for the seiko at 3:38?

    • @justme7920
      @justme7920 Před 4 lety +5

      Henry Kemblowski snk793

    • @notme3686
      @notme3686 Před 2 lety

      @@justme7920
      Just saying hi to myself

  • @adamjarosz5558
    @adamjarosz5558 Před 9 měsíci

    Hay Ben. Where have you bought THE:5th?

  • @Philip-dy3ww
    @Philip-dy3ww Před 4 lety

    My seiko 5 15J1 mineral glass shattered when fell to floor , replaced it with mineral then broke again when it was hit by door handle. I took it to repair they used acrylic.. somehow I prefer it... not a scratch ( also I m more careful) and I like the dome like effect

  • @BrijeshKumar4599
    @BrijeshKumar4599 Před 4 lety +2

    Nice video. I always wonder why watch brands do not use corning guerilla glass.

    • @tommymaddox6785
      @tommymaddox6785 Před 9 měsíci

      Something I always have to chime in on about gorilla glass. It's useless once it's scratched. You've removed the ion impregnation prestress. It's critical to keep a phone screen protector on your phone at all times to retain the impact resistance it is rated for. Once your screen has a scratched all the strength is gone.

  • @stusims6567
    @stusims6567 Před 3 lety

    Great video Ben!!! You explained the crystals perfectly!

  • @Spectre.007
    @Spectre.007 Před 4 lety

    Did you try to shatter the sapphire while on the watch? When there's no support on it's center point.