Watch servicing

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Watch servicing

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  • #444959
    SillyOldDuffer
    Moderator
      @sillyoldduffer
      Posted by J Hancock on 06/01/2020 11:56:34:

      Which 'kind of ' moves the original question on, to what is it that we want of a watch ?

      Like a Moore and Wright micrometer to measure things accurately, or a Lidl version which can double up as a G-Cramp now and then ?

      Micrometers and watches aren't a good example, even if it is assumed that Lidl sell Micrometers so nasty they are only good as G-clamps! (What's shocking about Lidl tools is how good they are, not how bad.)

      Steve started the thread by saying:

      I have a very nice German automatic watch – a Sinn 656. … It loses 2 seconds a day

      I believe the Sinn 656 cost about £1000 new. While Sinn have a reputation for "quality", and Steve's watch is certainly good-looking (I'd happily wear one), it's not a respectable time-keeper. Technology has moved on and it's rather easy for inexpensive electronic time-pieces to leave their expensive mechanical cousins in the dust. Accuracy, precision, functionality, shock-proofing, magnetic tolerance, and water-resistance can all be done better without a delicate mechanical movement.

      So, if anyone buys an expensive mechanical watch, it's not because they are especially good time-keepers. What you get for your money is a watch that looks and feels good. It shows other wealthy people you might be wealthy too, providing entrance to their social network. Of course, they also appeal to the socially insecure seeking respect: gangsters, drug-dealers, dictators, sports-stars, Lottery Winners and second-raters with a bit of spare cash.

      This £1500 Sinn 856 I like very much. It's plain good taste. I'd wear one if I wanted to dress well, perhaps to impress a discerning lady:

      These two, costing $55,000,000 and $18,000,000 respectively, I consider the epitome of poor taste:

      May just be me, but isn't the most ghastly of this pair the expensive one?

      Dave

      Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 06/01/2020 13:03:12

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      #444964
      John Haine
      Participant
        @johnhaine32865

        Pictures Dave? Was that million?

        #444969
        Neil Wyatt
        Moderator
          @neilwyatt

          I have a rather special, if relatively inexpensive battery powered watch. The first model from a series of moderate collectability (only worth about £85).

          The movement failed so I sent it for replacement, new battery and nitrogen fill, with a note saying not to change the slightly scratched glass as it is part of the character of having had it from new.

          They didn't charge…

          Neil

          #444976
          Ian Johnson 1
          Participant
            @ianjohnson1

            I've got a very nice Longines watch which I haven't worn for about 20 years and I haven't worn any watch at all for the past 15 years or so!

            Somebody else always knows the time! Or I just look at my mobile phone!

            Not going to pay 55 million dolllars for one though!!!!

            Ian

            #444980
            SillyOldDuffer
            Moderator
              @sillyoldduffer
              Posted by John Haine on 06/01/2020 13:40:24:

              Pictures Dave? Was that million?

              Afraid so, the first is a Graff Hallucination, the second a Jacob & Co Billionaire Watch. I suppose the idea is to humiliate some poor Rolex owner by tricking him into boasting about his cheapskate Oyster Perpetual and then rubbing his nose in a properly expensive watch!

              Dave

              #444993
              John Haine
              Participant
                @johnhaine32865

                You're right, they are utterly disgusting at almost every level.

                #444995
                Samsaranda
                Participant
                  @samsaranda

                  Purchased a mechanical self winding Seiko watch when I was in the Middle East in the mid sixties, it is still working but relegated to a drawer as the case is now battered and worn. Have had a succession of Seiko and Pulsar watches over the years, none stopped working but also became battered and worn so relegated to the drawer, all these watches kept immaculate time, definitely value for money. Current watch is a Citizen Eco Drive which sets its time from a radio signal, don’t envisage any problems with it, timekeeping is as accurate as you could expect with radio signal regulation and will probably only be relegated to the drawer if and when it also becomes battered. I am very hard on my watches they suffer physically but all soldier on, my experience is you can’t beat Japanese timepieces for value, Rolex and Omega etc. probably have the edge on quality of cases but are they worth the exorbitant prices charged nowadays.
                  Dave W

                  #444996
                  Brian Morehen
                  Participant
                    @brianmorehen85290

                    Try Terry Casey at RightTime in Leicester Had my Brietling Avenger serviced there 18 Months ago well satisfied.

                    Brian Morehen

                    #444997
                    Brian Morehen
                    Participant
                      @brianmorehen85290

                      Try Terry Casey at RightTime in Leicester Had my Brietling Avenger serviced there 18 Months ago well satisfied.

                      Brian Morehen

                      #445008
                      Grindstone Cowboy
                      Participant
                        @grindstonecowboy

                        $18 million and they couldn't be bothered to get those screw slots in line…. Not buying one now.

                        #445012
                        Steve Crow
                        Participant
                          @stevecrow46066
                          Posted by Grindstone Cowboy on 06/01/2020 19:07:37:

                          $18 million and they couldn't be bothered to get those screw slots in line…. Not buying one now.

                          There is an article about this and an interview with Roger Smith (Britains pre-eminent watchmaker) somewhere on the web explain how it is impossible to make screws that perfectly align for watch movements.

                          The ones that do (and make them a feature) use artifice like captive screw heads and hidden nuts.

                          The time piece is truly hideous but I'm in two minds about this sort of thing,

                          These symbols of obscene wealth provide employment for many artisans and ensure that knowledge is passed on.

                          #445020
                          Meunier
                          Participant
                            @meunier
                            Posted by John Haine on 06/01/2020 17:50:46:

                            You're right, they are utterly disgusting at almost every level.

                            Agreed, the only saving grace is on the Jacob's movement where the skeletonisation of the movement with delicate bridge-work is nice. Shame about the rest of it, even the naff hands.
                            DaveD

                            #445041
                            Grindstone Cowboy
                            Participant
                              @grindstonecowboy

                              Had a read of the article and the interview, and I accept it would be tremendously difficult to get all of the screws in a watch lined up, but I still think (at that price) they could do better with those two highly visible ones. On shotguns, they make the thread first on the end of a rod, tighten it up in place, mark it and then make the head with the slot aligned where it has to be.

                              #445051
                              Steve Crow
                              Participant
                                @stevecrow46066
                                Posted by Grindstone Cowboy on 06/01/2020 21:36:36:

                                Had a read of the article and the interview, and I accept it would be tremendously difficult to get all of the screws in a watch lined up, but I still think (at that price) they could do better with those two highly visible ones. On shotguns, they make the thread first on the end of a rod, tighten it up in place, mark it and then make the head with the slot aligned where it has to be.

                                Your right at the end of the day. Those screws are so prominent they need to be aligned. At that price level they could make dozens until they found aligning ones.

                                #445087
                                John Haine
                                Participant
                                  @johnhaine32865
                                  Posted by Steve Crow on 06/01/2020 19:28:54:

                                  These symbols of obscene wealth provide employment for many artisans and ensure that knowledge is passed on.

                                  Hmm. I'm not sure there are that many artisans involved or that the knowledge of making obscene bling is worth passing on!

                                  #445093
                                  Neil Wyatt
                                  Moderator
                                    @neilwyatt

                                    “The Graff Hallucination is a sculptural masterpiece, a celebration of the miracle of colored diamonds.”

                                    At the risk of breaking forum rules myself, dare I suggest it's a tacky piece of s..te that looks like it fell out of a Poundland Christmas cracker and even Barbie would be embarrassed to wear it?

                                    The Jacobs would make a nice watch in a smaller plain case and without the bling – and with hands that look less Tonka.

                                    But money and good taste are not correlated…

                                    Neil

                                    #445095
                                    J Hancock
                                    Participant
                                      @jhancock95746

                                      Worth a visit if anyone passes by is the 'watch/clock making ' workshop in the Lier Tower (South-east of Antwerp)

                                      Belgium. All one man's work ! No batteries used.

                                      #445104
                                      Brian G
                                      Participant
                                        @briang

                                        The cost (and poor results in the case of my favourite Oris) of servicing was getting to me, so I decided to try a Seiko '5' automatic. Originally bought just because I didn't have a '5' and wondered what it was like, its lack of manual winding led to it becoming my daily wearer, which in turn made it my favourite.

                                        The bracelet is rubbish, but despite its slower beat it keeps time as well as the others and the well-known five features cover all my needs. It is also far more fun proudly saying how cheaply I bought it instead of grudgingly admitting how much I paid for the others

                                        Brian G

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