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Yes, they do accept returns; they accepted one from me

 

But when you buy from another country you also have customs duties, and in CA and other places you might pay Use Tax or Sales Tax. Returning things to an overseas supplier thus incurs the complication of rewinding those fees or else just writing them off as the cost of being a collector. 


When you can put the watch on your wrist and see/feel its physical fit and finish, you can then buy with more confidence and a lot less hassle (in the long run). 

The watch I bought had no technical flaws in assembly or operation, but I couldn't get past the "obvious in person, invisible in marketing" technical and design decision that Ming made with its hands!

Because the movement used was designed to power 3 hands, it has a second hand arbor just waiting for the second hand to be pushed on... yet Ming chose to create its minute hand and leave an opening -- so the lonely second hand arbor is just turning there -- looking like the second hand has fallen off:



As a small-time watch repairman this irked me immensely. I could have opened the watch, found a second hand, cut the hand off and fitted the hub as a cover, but why should I? And I would always know it was a "coverup".

Obessive perhaps, but really, if we didn't think that way about our watches, we wouldn't be here. So I resolved it by returning the watch and unraveling the chain of delivery expenses.

Cheers,

Mike

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