^^^^^^^
Excellent rant. Wife likes Rolex. You buy her one.
Every time she wears it she is reminded of your love for her.
I wish someone loved DumbFree
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^^^^^^^
Excellent rant. Wife likes Rolex. You buy her one.
Every time she wears it she is reminded of your love for her.
I wish someone loved DumbFree
I don't get the watch obsession, either, but most people have something they spend money on that others don't understand. Some have multiple things. :)
Repost in the right thread
If you want to geek out on Rolex
Dude has many YouTube videos
https://youtu.be/xasm3GFL7mM
I wonder if you can still get a nice looking Rowex on Canal Street for $100.
Now I want to know what gretch bought but all the attachments are gone.
I happen to have an absolute mint ladies Rolex to sell. Oyster Perpetual Datejust, diamond bezel, gold/steel band, all documents, box, etc. If any of you high rollers want to spoil your wives and/or girlfriends ... PM me !
(no, I won't cross post to GS, or post pics of the prior owner)
I thought it was a super cool watch and being the Luddite I am hadn’t heard of them and went down a rabbit hole of Swiss watch makers last night. So I’m glad he posted it.
Thanks...that can be a deep rabbit hole! For me, the manufacturing process and the people that hand finish the watches is what draws me in....especially the Royal Oak. For example, and you probably found some of this during your search, the dials are still made from brass using 100 year old pantographs with each dial taking almost an hour to engrave. The bracelet alone takes almost 8 hours to hand finish. Heck, the hand finished and assembled movement has almost 200 parts and the entire watch is only 9mm thick with a 60 hour power reserve.
Making something that can be +/- 2 or 3 seconds a week and doesn't take a battery? I think it is badass. My father was a tool & die maker, grinding carbine to incredible tolerances and a swiss watch made by hand using similar skills and precision just fascinates me. Many times when I look down at a nice watch, I think of of my dad and the black carbide dust on hands everyday after work. The people that make and design fine watches are flat out artist and I find enjoyment wearing their art everyday. AP has about 1,500 employees (Rolex for example has 30,000) and they produce about 50K watches per year (Rolex produces almost 1 million).
You can do better - $82 Invicta Sub copy is diveable and built on a legit regulatable Seiko motion which should last the rest of your days if you wear it enough: https://www.amazon.com/Invicta-8926O...5840004&sr=8-2
You can get even more insane and fall down the British/French maker rabbit hole (dunno if there’s any yanks left)
https://www.phillips.com/detail/geor...ls/NY080222/12
Is one I’d like but I’d never spend $2.3 million on a watch even if I ever had that cash. The Watchmaking book the guy the watch is named after (he didn’t make it) is a fascinating bit of craft because as gretch said, there’s a ton of skill and effort that goes into them
aslong as the owner and wearer like it, fuck the critics
It's a great looking watch. And for another $87, you can get it with a 26 jewel Swiss movement, nicer crystal and a nicer band https://www.amazon.com/Invicta-Diver.../dp/B00AH3DCAA
Yes...but 47mm! If you can spend just a hair more, could grab something line an Undone diver for $335 at a more reasonable case diameter.
https://www.tetongravity.com/forums/...-really/page15
Very cool. My grandfather was a tool and die maker too. Made lots of different parts for lots of stuff, but the typewriters always impressed me. I think he made stuff for Royal and Singer. Can't be sure. I do remember my dad was pretty pissed when I disassembled one. I think I could have put it back together too, but he boxed it all up and tossed it. In his mind it was a lost cause. Looking back, I am pretty sure I would have gotten it working again.
I worked summers in college at the shop (about 600 employee shop with inhouse carbide production and plating lines). Listening to the multi ton presses run all day long through ear plugs would always make me sleepy (plus getting up in time to get to work by 6:30 am). Standing at cnc machines and grinders all day did not treat his shoulders, neck, back and heels well. Paying for it now in his late 60s. Tough gig.
I used to have a gold Omega Seamaster Deville--got it as a prize. I like small, simple looking watches. 35mm case. I have skinny wrists. I got it as an academic prize, gave it to a kid. People seem to be asking 2--3 K for them online, so not in Rolex territory but when I wore a watch that was my idea of how a watch should look.
Attachment 419492
Obviously, everyone has a different style. Old Goat rocking a 35mm and Arnold rocking a 45mm Panerai probably both look great and if you like really big watches, go for whatever you want and make it work. I am not cool enough to pull off either side of the extremes. My wrist is 7 3/8" and I generally stick to 38mm to 43mm diameter watches depending on the lug width.
I'm 6 3/4
Wrists
Why would I want to spend 2-4x as much for a not Rolex copy when the point of posting the good looking sub-$100 auto Rolex copy with a US warranty was to reply to a post about fake Rolexes in Chinatown? Besides, Invicta makes that watch in different sizes including the Sub's original 44mm, and 40mm for chicks and accountants.
Sorry...what? The Sub's original size was 37mm when introduced in 1953 and then went to 40mm in 1959. Last year it went to "41mm"...but is really round 40.8mm.
If you want something more in the 45mm range, wouldn't it make more sense to buy reproduction of the Fifty Fathoms and not a blown Sub?
2nd link I posted, the 9937 with the SW200 movement and assembled in Switz, has the 40mm case and sapphire crystal and takes 20mm bands. $169
I can't stand Russia, but they build cool-looking aircraft and watches
https://www.amazon.com/VOSTOK-Amphib.../dp/B08Y5G394B
Wonder when the Moonswatch will become available to purchase online?
Here's some Soviet style for $150
https://www.amazon.com/VOSTOK-Komand...st_sto_dp&th=1
My wrist is 7 3/4" and anything over 42mm looks like a friggin hubcap attached to my arm.
My wife bought me a Rolex for our anniversary two years ago. I've worn it exactly 3 times and it is now known as the wedding watch. I just can't get comfortable with that thing on. They're heavy and awkward.
Don't get me wrong, it's beautiful and I absolutely intend to leave it to one of my daughters some day--I do appreciate it and enjoy wearing it on very special occasion. But for day to day, I'll rock my Timex or Garmin.
Excellent looking watch OG. Similar to my favorite lately in the drawer (1960 2-tone). I didn't wear watches much during the pandemic as I was constantly working on something outside. Having to get used to having something on my wrist again getting back to work.
Attachment 419564
Maybe I need one of those fancy boxes some of you all have?
The cool kids rock a Swatch
MISSION TO URANUS
https://www.swatch.com/en-us/mission.../SO33L100.html
Attachment 419566
BTW mine had a leather band--I used light tan bands although they tended to get dirty and needing replacement frequently. When my mom died I inherited my dad's Omega--steel case. The other kid got that one. Neither of them wears a watch regularly but they wear the Omegas like jewelry when they want to dress up. I only wear a watch sometimes when I'm hiking etc and don't want to carry a phone. But the battery is always dead so I wind up taking the phone.
I'm not a jewelry guy, so watches should be practical to be worn. If I am scuba diving, then preferably an Omega Seamaster ( I like a black rubber band when underwater) or Rolex Submariner. The Rolex is also great for all outdoor activities. If in court, or on public business, then something like a Patek Calatrava with a crocodile band.