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Horological Meandering

...and another bubble lurking after the first one...

 

Hi Steve,

Nice post. I gave up following new watches a few years back as the prices went up in proportion to the square of the increase in their diameters, and am more than happy in the relatively sane world of clocks.

I suspect there's a second bubble waiting to happen when enough people discover the cost of servicing or repairing and the market starts flooding with unserviced, unrepaired expensive watches. And I even more strongly suspect that this will hit the uber-expensive exotics even more. You can get a skilled/willing watchmaker to make you things like chronograph register springs or other parts, but no one but the original manufacturer is going to replace parts made out of sintered unobtainium with kryptonite PVD.  And this is even more crucial for parts that were designed mathematically and manufactured to extreme tolerances. 

Try getting a "simple" minute repeater repaired and setup correctly, but check your back balance before you do so.  What's it going to cost to fix a G&F tourbillon?

nick

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