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WATCH
CRYSTALS
Clear
up your questions about crystals with this brief
primer. |
What
is a watch crystal?
What
are watch crystals made of?
What
are the advantages and disadvantages of each
material?
What
exactly is synthetic sapphire?
Can
you tell if a crystal is made of sapphire by
looking at it?
Are
scratch-resistant crystals new?
Are
all scratch-resistant crystals made of synthetic
sapphire?
The
terms "lunette," "bombé",
"chevé" and "boule"
are sometimes used to describe watch crystals.
What do they mean?
What
are "anti-reflective" or "glare-resistant"
crystals?
How
much do watch crystals cost to replace? |
1.What is a watch crystal?
A watch crystal is a transparent
cover that protects the watch face. Note that,
coincidently, the word "crystal" is
also used to denote the tiny piece of quartz
that serves as an oscillator in a quartz watch.
These two types of crystals have nothing to
do with each other. The latter is usually called
a "quartz crystal" to prevent confusion. |
2. What are watch crystals made of?
They can be made of any of three
materials: 1- plexiglass (a clear, lightweight
type of plastic), 2- ordinary glass - like that
used for windows, and usually referred to in
the watch business as "mineral glass"
or 3- synthetic sapphire (see question 4). Some
crystals are made of both mineral and sapphire
glass. Seiko, for example, makes some watches
with crystals made of mineral glass covered
with a layer of synthetic sapphire. Seiko calls
this composite material "Sapphlex". |
3. What are the advantages and disadvantages
of each material?
Plexiglass, as you would expect,
is the least expensive. It is also the least
likely to shatter and the most likely to become
scratched. Mineral glass, even though it has
been hardened by a tempering process, is more
likely to break than plexiglass. But it is also
more scratch-resistant than that material. Synthetic
sapphire is the most expensive glass crystal
material and the most scratch resistant. Because
it is so hard, it is also brittle, and shatters
more easily than mineral glass or plexiglass. |
4.
What exactly is synthetic sapphire?
It
is
a very hard, transparent material made of crystallizing
aluminum oxide at very high temperatures. Chemically,
synthetic sapphire is the same as the natural
sapphire used in jewelry, but without the coloring
agents that give the gemstone its various hues.
When
it is heated, the synthetic sapphire forms round
masses that are sliced into pieces with diamond-coated
saws. These disks are then ground and polished
into watch crystals. (One reason sapphire crystals
are relatively expensive is that the tools required
to make them are costly.)
Sapphire
(whether natural or synthetic) is one of the
hardest substances on earth. It measures 9 on
the Mohs scale, which is a system for rating
the relative hardness of various materials.
(Diamond measures 10, the highest rating.) Watch
crystals made of synthetic sapphire are often
marketed as "scratch resistant", meaning
they are very difficult - but not impossible
- to scratch. Diamond can scratch them; so can
man-made materials that incorporate silicon
carbide, with, with a Mohs rating of between
9 and 10, is, like diamond, harder than sapphire.
These materials are sometimes used to make simulated-stone
surfaces for furniture or walls. The watch wearer
should note that accidentally scraping a sapphire
crystal against such a surface could cause a
scratch. |
5. Can you tell if a crystal is made of sapphire
by looking at it?
No. Mineral glass and sapphire
generally look the same. A surefire way to tell
them apart (albeit an often impractical one)
is with a scratch test, says Johann Jorgo, technical
director at Baume & Mercier Inc. New York.
A stainless steel knife or screwdriver will
scratch a mineral-glass crystal but not a sapphire
one. |
6. Are Scratch-resistant
crystals new? No.
Synthetic sapphire was invented in the 19th
century and first used for watch crystals in
the 1960s. Now really all high-end watch brands
use synthetic sapphire crystals in at least
some of their models. |
7. Are all scratch-resistant crystals made of
synthetic sapphire? No.
Some mineral-glass crystals are also marketed
as "scratch resistant." These crystals
have a hard coating that makes them less likely
to get scratched. |
8. The terms "lunette",
"bombé", "chevé",
and "boule" are sometimes used to describe
watch crystals. What do they mean?
All
are French words that refer to the shape of
the crystal. "Lunette" simply means
round - like a full moon (lune means "moon"
in French). Bombé, chevé and boule
all mean concave, or dome-shaped.
There
are other words used to describe watch-crystal
shapes. A "raised" crystal is flat
on top but raised up, like a birthday cake.
"Shaped crystals" are any that aren't
circular - rectangles, square and ovals being
the most common. "Cocktail" shapes
are the more exotic and extreme examples of
shaped crystals. They include elongated baguette
and octahedral (eight-sided) crystals. |
9. What are "anti-reflective" or "glare-resistant"
crystals?
This type of crystal has been
coated on one or both sides with a substance
- the same one used on anti-reflective eyeglasses
- that lessens reflections and glare and makes
it easier to read the watch face. Anti-reflective
crystals can be made of either mineral glass
or synthetic sapphire. One interesting feature
of these crystals is that, viewed from the front,
they are virtually invisible because they aren't
reflecting any light. In some instances, the
coating gives the crystal a telltale bluish
tint, as it does on eyeglasses. This tint is
easiest to see if the watch has a light-colored
dial. |
10. How much do watch crystals cost to replace?
Consumers can expect to pay
anything from perhaps $20 to $25 for a plexiglass
crystal to more than $100 for a shaped synthetic
sapphire one. (At Baume & Mercier, for example,
synthetic sapphire crystals range from $65 to
$135.) The average cost of a round mineral crystal
is about $30 to $60. An anti-reflective coating
adds to the cost of any crystal. In general,
the more expensive the watch, the more the consumer
will have to pay to replace its crystal. |
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| Europa Star is the premier provider of international watch industry publications. For 80 years, we´ve supplied watch distributors and watch manufacturers with news of product trends, seasonal events and watch trade shows, watch brand updates, and much more. Our web and print publications serve the watch industry and jewelry industry, and they are available in several different languages, making them accessible to the international watch industry. |
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