ebcohn1
26
Define.
As a time keeping quality device? No.
For the esthetics? Your call.
Spring drive and quartz render it obsolete in a fashion, but if I had the money and the inclination, I would consider strongly.
They can be beautiful.
Is a tourbillon worth it?
By: SamEE : February 27th, 2011-03:39
Hi everyone, I am new to the site, I know this is a common question but it is new to me. Is a tourbillon worth the money? I can't afford it so I am going to say that they are not worth it. I mean the difference in price in a watch with a tourbillon from a...
Still learning
By: SamEE : February 27th, 2011-05:04
Still learning the culture on this site. I love it. It's nice to connect to people who love watches as much as I do! I guess in the future I would like to add at least one tourbillon to the collection! Cheers Samgame
The trick
By: CaliforniaJed : February 27th, 2011-07:06
is to have a good pizza while listening to good poetry. Now ohers have argued the point, but I still say one sounds foolish attempting to recite poetry while eating good pizza, even if it is one's own poetry. Reading good poetry is of course easily achiev...
I don't like to agree...
By: dr.kol : February 27th, 2011-04:33
For me it is very simple: I can't really see what kind of real benefits tourbillon could offer and even I had times when I could easily afford buying one, I did not. At the same time, nobody needs a minute repeater and still I am considering saving money ...
but can they get boring?
By: amerix : February 27th, 2011-08:51
The dual-triaxial versions have a much better chance when they come forth from someone like Thomas Prescher. The omni-axial from JLC - the highly touted Gyro I - which I actually tried on and found to be boring, and slso mixed together with the other comp...
Define.
By: ebcohn1 : February 27th, 2011-10:43
As a time keeping quality device? No. For the esthetics? Your call. Spring drive and quartz render it obsolete in a fashion, but if I had the money and the inclination, I would consider strongly. They can be beautiful.
Personal priorities
By: AndrewD : February 27th, 2011-18:42
Hello Samgame, I have been enjoying the responses of other PuristS to your question. It is clear to me that the 'value' in a Tourbillon, and indeed any complication, is a very personal thing. And it depends on your priorities. I value the historical links...
The 6 months caveat
By: amerix : February 28th, 2011-00:35
I read this a while ago in a German magazine interviewing someone high in the technical division at Patek Philippe. I'll try delving into my stacks of periodicals to discover his name, rank and exactly how he was cited. The argument at PP for not putting ...
Amery,
By: ChristianDK : February 28th, 2011-12:45
I've read this as well. but it strikes me as strange that almost all top brands, I can think of, have exposed tourbillons. Also tourbillon specialists like Haldimann or Greubel Forsay. If exposed oils would, in fact, cause the watch to loose accuracy or p...
Oxygen is another culprit
By: amerix : March 1st, 2011-04:38
I have also read that a half-filled bottle of a certain oil can deteriorate within half a year. Others have a shelf life up to a year. However, expert opinions seem to vary wildly on this sticky subject. Well I suppose that any residual air in the bottles...