Two years ago, I bought an Anstead
Oceanis. This was one of the first micros to make a real go of it on
Kickstarter, and a damn nice watch (you can read a Guest Bum review here),
but there was just one thing wrong. You see, the Seiko NH35 movement
inside had a misprinted day wheel. This was not unique to my watch, or
even to Anstead. Every disc in that particular NH35 production run had
the same flaw. The day dipped a tiny bit down the right, most noticeably
on Thursday and Friday. It was just enough to be maddening. When I
raised my concern with Tom Anstead, he offered a full refund, but I
declined. In the end, I liked the watch too much to let it go. So I
cooked up a plan B. With the help of Jake Bourdeau at Dagaz Watches, I learned
the disks in the NH35 were interchangeable with that of the more common
Seiko 7s36. The easiest way to get my hands on one was to buy a Seiko 5
and pull it out, but what to do with that poor Seiko? I couldn't just
leave it that way. I'd have to find the right watch, take what I needed,
and improve what was left behind.









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