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Collecting Watches.

Chris Hobson

Well-Known Member
Relationship to Diabetes
Type 2
I've always had a fascination for watches. I like to window shop whenever we go to the McArthur Glen shopping centre near York. I learned a lot more about them from a thread that I started that was about the really crazy prices that the high end watches command. I've also started watching a lot of YouTube videos on the subject which were very informative.

I never quite understood the attraction of mechanical watches now that we have quartz movements that are much more accurate. Now I understand that a mechanical movement can always be repaired, no matter how bad a state it is in, so has the potential to last forever, hence the higher value. A dead quartz movement is usually impossible to repair. Sometimes the movement can be replaced, replacement quartz movements are fairly cheap. The problem is that, unless it is a very basic movement, a replacement is unlikely to be available. I have also learned that a flat battery needs to be removed or replaced immediately to avoid ruining your quartz movement. A fairly recent development has been solar powered watches which just need exposure to light in order to keep working. There are now watches that use the satellite network or the Internet and are self correcting so that you know that they will always show the correct time. After agonising about buying myself a new watch that I didn't really need, I splurged on a Victorinox Swiss Army day-date watch. I'm really happy with it and wear it a lot. I tend to like the military or pilot watches for their rugged practicality, but I also see the need for a more dressy watch to wear when going out somewhere posh, a restaurant or the theatre. So here is my wish list if I do decide to become a collector.

1) Victorinox day-date Swiss Army. Tick

2) Aesop Tourbillon 7041. A dress watch with a fabulous showy mechanism. These used to be prohibitively expensive but are now being mass produced in China.

3) Sturmanski open space day-date NH36-1891771. Russian Military style watch.

4) Casio G Shock GAW-100B-1AER. These come with a bewildering range of features. In the end I go for one with radio control, solar power and an analogue face.

5) Swatch SY235400. Mechanical dress watch that is relatively inexpensive due to clever design with fewer moving parts and being made entirely by machines.

6) Lilienthal Berlin Chronograph Metiorite III. Another dress watch This one has a thin slice of a meteorite in the face. Yes it's a gimmick but it means that each one is unique.

7) A pocket watch. This is a whole new rabbit hole that I have only just begun to explore. I will probably have to buy a waistcoat as well.

Edit.
8) Holzkern Syntonize chronograph.
Dress watch, solar powered and partly made from walnut.
 
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Now I like a nice watch, at the moment I have enough for days of the week. They range from the one I use for doing diy right up to my Brietling that only comes out for special occasions. Most are either mechanical or solar powered so no trouble keeping them going.
 
My response to the question in this thread:


Was the one word busy.Having really dived head first into the watch rabbit hole, I'm thinking of having a go at doing watch repairs. Having had a career as an engineer, I'm already pretty good at fixing things, the added challenge here is doing repairs on such a minute scale.I already have some books on the subject but they tend to be somewhat opaque, certainly not page turners. You Tube videos are much more helpful though and it was these that made me think that it might be worth giving it a go.

Why am I busy? Well, as retired persons whose sprog has flown the nest, I have a woodwork shop and wifey has a sewing room. A space for doing watch repairs has to be very clean and dust free with a purpose built workbench and lots of tiny tools. How many of you would have an extra room if you could only get rid of some junk? Our house is an old council house. Many of these came with a six foot by eight foot (they were built before metric was a thing) brick shed. The previous owners of our house roofed over the space between the shed and the house and also built a garage which is now my wood shop. So that is my most recent project, emptying the brick shed of junk, replacing the rotten window frame, repainting the walls, building fitted cupboards, installing extra electrical sockets. Tomorrow I will be putting down lino. I didn't expect that being retired would be such hard work. Photographs will follow once it is finished.
Edit.
Fitted cupboards, electrical sockets and lino now done. Two IKEA drawer units built. Workbench is currently under construction. I'm currently taking a break to watch women's cricket, England V West Indies ODI.
 
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My father used to do watch repairs in his spare time and he even built a grandfather clock.

I tried to do watch repairs, but failed dramatically, I could take them apart, but never get all the bits back together or if I did there was always one piece still left on the bench.

I think I'm better with a lump hammer and an adjustable spanner
 
Carefully memorising how something needs to be re-assembled during the dismantling process is an acquired skill. Once mastered it can be applied to pretty much anything. I would often draw little sketches to help with remembering where various bits and pieces needed to go. Now of course camera phones have taken over that particular task.

It is tempting to say, oh I'm just rubbish at this, and then just give up. Often it just needs persistence and practice.
 
I find this to be a really satisfying story, from Wikipedia:

In order to promote the G-Shock worldwide, the American division of Casio released a commercial in which an ice hockey player used a DW-5200C G-Shock as a hockey puck to demonstrate the toughness of the watch. The commercial gained negative publicity and Casio was accused of false advertising. A TV news channel then set out to conduct live tests on the DW-5200C to check whether it was as tough and durable as advertised. This involved repeating the action shown in the commercial. The watch survived the impact of the hockey stick, and the G-Shock gained popularity among the general public. The popularity of G-Shocks increased throughout the 1990s. By 1998, Casio had released more than 200 different G-Shock models, with worldwide sales at 19 million units.

In your face cynical doubters!
 
I'm coming up to a significant birthday and have always wanted a quality mechanical watch. Unfortunately watches have over the last few decades become must have items and as such prices have exploded. You could have had a Patek Calatrava for £7k in '95 now the cheapest start at about £25k Rolex would bite your hand off to sell you a Submariner for £2250 now you'd pay 5 times that if you could actually find one!
 
This website has a really good selection of both quartz and mechanical watches that are all within the mid price range. I've also seen Raymond Weil watches that aren't too expensive.

 
My little watch workshop is almost complete. I wish that I had taken a before picture of the crappy junk filled shed. Anyway, here it is with fitted cupboards, workbench, drawer units, electrical sockets and diffused lighting.View attachment 35622
Looks great!
 
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