Wow, that was one real basket case to begin with. I'm with you, always erring on the side of conservation rather than restoration, but when all you have to work with is something abused beyond usability you have to weigh the historical value you would be destroying vs the value you are recovering by returning it to a usable state. My guess is the current owner has no idea who Uschi ever was.
Those sides do leave the factory polished like that, and polishing them is pretty much accepted as part of a cleaning nowadays (along with refreshing the brushed pattern). It's a practice I really don't comprehend, as I prefer the patina they both acquire (both blending towards a rubbed satin) through use. But some people really like the look of "desk divers".
I'm weird about watches. My dad was a full blown collector and I inherited much of it. I kept most of the tool and military watches and sold the rest to put towards my kid's college educations, but I kind of got into it all with the research required to market what I did sell.
What I learned is that I don't care for restored watches. I prefer watches that show their history, but are mechanically maintained. I would much rather own a watch that is beat to hell and shows its history than a watch that looks as though it sat in a box it''s whole life.
And you know what I like even more? Frankenwatches. Watches that are pieced together from parts I appreciate - even if they are from different eras... even if some of the parts used are "fake" reproduction parts... For instance, I love early Rolex Explorers, but don't have 50k sitting around to buy one. But I do have an old Rolex Air King case... and an ETA 2824 movement. Add a fake dial, a Tudor handset, and a OEM crown and... Bingo... I have a couple of hundred dollars in a watch that I absolutely love, but the watch world HATES. I love that stuff...
But this guy… he’s operating in an entirely different league when it comes to craftsmanship and knowledge. What I do is basically just hacking stuff together and hoping it works. What he does actually creates value, provenance, and longevity. Honestly, I don’t even know enough to fully understand how good he is, which probably says everything.
And the tools… my god. They’re incredible. I’d love nothing more than to spend a day in that shop, just playing with everything, poking around, and seeing if I could even begin to figure out how it all works.