
KMII presents a 'cheap and cheerful' comparison test between the Swatch System 51 and the Seiko 5, two entry-level mechanical watches. This post offers a lighthearted yet insightful look at their features, movements, and wearability, providing a valuable resource for those new to mechanical watchmaking or seeking affordable, in-house options.

Both are more or less amongst the cheapest entries into the world of mechanical watchmaking, so a good starting point for children, nephews and nieces or potentially wayward older relatives that need to be brought onto the proper, non-electronic path. At the same time, both are also the cheapest examples of in-house, manufacture movements, if one wants to do it more tongue in cheek 

On a more practical level, both can be set very quickly, none of them hacks, and the Seiko offers a day complication in addition to the date (here probably good, unless raising a Nicolas Junior
) but loses out in terms of not offering hand winding.
Stay tuned for the field testing, with Part 2 to follow later today.Thats my choice. Cheers. Geross.
After having completed the measuring and engine comparisons, here comes the field testing. Both contestants ready and rearing to go Basically a chore filled Saturday, which simulates the uses the watches will be put to in real life. While none of the two is meant as a formal watch, you can use both of them with a shirt - at a stretch (as seen below). If your brain is still sleep deprived (happens with small children), the blue of the day at least tells you that it is Saturday on the Seiko 5 (red
In fact i can definitely see myself taking it to holidays - if they are not exactly of the swimming first and foremost variety
This is just an example, there are others with a metal bracelet and more protective features, which can take lots more abuse for not much more money Cheap does not need to be charm free...
... that is sustainability. After the quartz crisis, the main argument brought forward for mechanical watch movements was their sustainability. It does not need an energy different from its wearer's natural movement (or winding), but most of all: it can be repaired even after decades, and it is not necessary to dispose it like a piece of food packaging in case of components failing. While this principle has been forgotten or even violated more than once (as in cases of watch movement components
While its predecessor - the Tissot Astrolon - only used plastic but was fully serviceable, this is definitely a throwaway product. We can say it is catering to the times, with most entering some sorts of drawers way before their life expectancy will expire but it is a sad trend overall. The opposite of the Clock of the Long Now...
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