1954 movement in a '57 (L7) case. Nice stainless case and back. I have a feeling the stem on the watch is wrong since it protrudes so far from the case, or the crown is wrong. I don't know. The watch is hard to set turning it forward, it tends to make the crown come undone. It sometimes runs for awhile but not always. The movement needs to be serviced. I was planning on installing a nice working black faced movement into this case as its currently in a non Bulova case. I can't figure out how to remove the crown to remove it from the case however.
Hi BlackbirdM3. To get the movement out you have to remove the stem and crown together. I don't have a self-winding movement to show you as an example, so I'm going to use this 10AE movement.
You need to loosen the little screw just to the left under the crown about two turns. Then gently pull on the crown and see if the stem will come out. If not, loosen it about a 1/2 turn at a time and try pulling the stem out. Do Not Completely back this screw out or you will have to take the hands and face off the watch to put it back in.
When you go to put it back in, push the stem in until it's seated and snug this screw up. Then pull the stem out to the set position and tighten the screw down. Don't use excessive force or you will break the screw. If the stem and crown pull completely out when you snug the screw down you didn't have it seated completely. Push it back in and slowly loosen this screw until you feel the stem seat and then snug it down as mentioned above.
This case was used in the Bulova 23 A and B; the B had the black sunburst dial with silver markers and luminous hands and dots; the A had the white sunburst dial with silver even numbered markers. Your dial is not correct for either or those variants; it was used in other variants, like the yellow gold G. Your dial also appears to be a re-dial, because the bottom lettering is wrong or at least none I've seen before; it should be SELFWINDING first, SIX next line, ADJUSTMENTS 3rd line.
It appears to be all Bulova 23 (though not sure about the black second hand), but a mix of different variants and years.
I'm tentative on a "23" ID here. To Ken's points there's a three year spread on the movement to case and a slight issue on the dial. I can overlook the dial as it may be a redial that skipped some of the standard lettering.
I'll go along with a tentative "23" ID but want to float a Non-Conforming ID to the panel first. I don't want to push it too hard because at the end of the day it really is a 23 I guess.
Panel - your thoughts?
In reply to I would say this is a dial by Andersok
Agree, a 'Buova 23' variant of some sort. Maybe a mariage of case and dial/movement, but also maybe original in a not previously seen configuration.
The 1955 price guide shows 14 basic Bulova 23 variants from "A - P"
- $59.90
- Bulova 23 "A"
- Bulova 23 "B"
- $71.50
- Bulova 23 "C"
- Bulova 23 "D"
- Bulova 23 "P"
- $75.00
- Bulova 23 "K"
- $85.00
- Bulova 23 "E"
- Bulova 23 "F"
- $95.00
- Bulova 23 "G"
- Bulova 23 "H"
- Bulova 23 "L"
- Bulova 23 "O"
- $175.00 (14Kt Gold)
- Bulova 23 "I"
- Bulova 23 "J"
Known variants here: http://www.mybulova.com/forums/bulova-23-series
Variants with the arrow head markers: "D", "E", "F", "G", "J", "I", "K" - all not matching subject watch.
Variants not identified by and advert: "L", "O", "P"
Variants "L" and "O" are higher in price but have the same features as all models so I'm thinking the price difference comes down to the case and in particular the rolled gold bezel versus stainless steel.
Thus leaving the "P" variant.
Tentative "P" but 3 ticks for Bulova 23.