WatchProSite|Market|Digest

Horological Meandering

Great article. It makes me wonder ...

 

Background

I started accumulating watches following a set of not so rational reasons but the mainly one was that a mechanical watch is something, in most of cases, produced to last.

Since my business (IT) flows around things that are designed to be obsolete on a matter of years or even months, a watch offers to me something close to a lifetime.

My accumulation was removed from my hands (long and sad story) and, after some months of grief, I was able to restart this hobby.

No more accumulation. My small set is now composed of watches that, I believe, will last.

I don't have any particular favorite or any watch that I can say that this will stay forever but there are ones that I may trade, provided that they are on the same product line.

I avoid flashy watches or watches that, considering where I live, attracts criminals (I don't want to experience a robbery again). In the past I have some Rolex watches. No more.

This reduces my set to watches that fulfill several factors:

a) Are long term maintainable with a reasonable maintenance cost

This also implies on parts availability since I never uses the watch manufacturer for maintenance.

b) Uses a standard attachment for straps (I'm a strap person and I like to swap straps)

I consider an AP Royal Oak (the old ones) as a great watch but I dislike the non-standard strap attachment.

c) Has some historic significance

I don't care about "brand ambassadors" and I don't plan to win any tennis championship but I love to wear a watch that, a similar model, was used to perform an outstanding task.

e) Are precise

I don't see any reason to own a watch that does not work on a very precise way.

Summary

There are watch aficionados that loves the almost exclusivity of a rare watch.
Not me.
I admire rare watches I'm always concerned to wear something that is hard to replace.
That is the reason that, as of now, I'm favoring watches that are, at the same time, common and sort of unusual.

Thank you Ping, again, for an article that make us think.

Nilo

  login to reply
💰1871 Marketplace Listings for Rolex