Originally posted by Boris_Koch
Originally, I took for granted, like most, that the more tritium gets exposed to light, the darker the patina.
Yet there's a couple of instances recently where guys have posted pictures of 5513 that they bought with a yellow patina, which became lighter over time as they were wearing them. One of them is a guy I know personally, his account is
here. Sorry it's in French, but I think the pictures speak for themselves. The first was shot in June 2006 and show a uniform light yellow patina. The second is from early 2007, and the indexes are almost pure white. Some other accounts were given by Jaume on TZ Rolex vintage
here and
there.
Honnestly, I don't quite know what to make of it. It could be the result of the light exposure, different levels of humidity where the watch was stored, etc.
Could also be that tritium color degrades more to yellow when exposed to bright light as the radioactive material is still active. And then, when the degradation caused by radioactivity is dead, strong light would cause the same whitening effect it does on any colored object.
So if it were me, I'd do what I do with any other watch: store it in a safe when not wearing the watch. And this would never, ever prevent me from wearing the watch when I feel like it, ie either in summer or winter (not that we have much winter in Singapore anyways).
I guess, if anything, this shows that, as in all things Rolex, there is never one definitive truth (except for Mr Patrizzi of course, for any watch he happens to have on sale).
Boris