sdtom
199
Anthony..I respectfully disagree with you 100% on this issue...
A $200K Ferrari will outperform a $10K Hyundai in every respect. The 500HP Ferrari will do 200mph and will run a 0-60 in under 4 seconds. The 100 HP Hyundai will do 100 mph and run a 10 second 0-60 time.The expensive technology that you are paying for actually performs a function that the Hyundai could not dream of.. Now back to watches...If I am paying $17K for a watch with a movement that cannot tell time any better than a $100 Unitas movement and will breakdown more often than the $100 movement...why would ANYONE pay for something that performs in an inferior manner, regardless of how "complicated" and "sophisticated' the movement is? The essential requirement of a watch movement is to tell time and do it accurately. The essential requirement of a car engine is to perform. Both a Ferrari and Hyundai engine will perform the essentials---but the Ferrari will perform at a much higher lever than the Hyundai. The movement in a PAM 270 will not perform at a level that is any better than a $100 movement watch.
PAM 270 failed again.... 2nd.
By: KHY : August 16th, 2009-03:30
Hi all, I bought PAM270 in the middle of last year 2008, it ran accurately for just 2 weeks then stopped in the middle of my shopping with friends. It was kind of disappointing when I think about it.... the watch is fully wound (automatic), and I wore it ...
Russian Roulette
By: bigdave : August 16th, 2009-05:49
Over the last couple of months, I have been boring people on other boards here with various service-oriented tales of woe relating to less brawny brands than Panerai. I have been loathe to identify too many of them by name, because of my view that the qua...
Fully noted
By: AnthonyTsai : August 17th, 2009-18:20
If this is how you really feel about watches, then why even buy mechanical watches? A quartz watch will be more accurate than any mechanical watch IMO You shouldn't be buying watches with the expectation that a more expensive watch will keep better time t...
A Category Error
By: bigdave : August 17th, 2009-19:24
It is one thing to say that the great pleasure we derive from mechanical watches comes at the cost of recognizing that they will be in the shop for service more often than their quartz counterparts, or that their utility to us includes aspects separate fr...
This is not ice hockey
By: bigdave : August 18th, 2009-10:12
As you suggest, manufacturers ought not expect to be excused for turning end-users into beta testers because the referee somehow will miss or ignore the first infraction, and will only complain if the follow-up service is inferior. They have already faile...
Still not acceptable.
By: BDLJ : August 18th, 2009-17:50
To continue with the car analogy and to continue your BMW M5 example. If the oil leak was caused by a defective part from a supplier, can you still blame BMW? If it is a design issue, do you consider it a bug?? WIthout knowing exactly what validation and ...
The Sheep Look Up
By: bigdave : August 18th, 2009-18:04
The more readily we say "this is how things work..." and shrug, the longer things will continue to work that way. I can't begin to know the economic circumstances of the 50% percentile contributor to these boards, but, for me, buying a fine mechanical wat...
May I have a word?
By: Falcon79 : August 19th, 2009-05:50
I am a test engineer, and even though designers and testers are doing their best in order to come up with a flawless product, the real test is in the field, where there are situations which were never forseen in developing and production design, and not b...
Is that right?
By: bigdave : August 19th, 2009-10:09
1. Surely you are aware that "millions of people" have not, and never will, use the 270. 2. Surely there is a meaningful gap between expecting a wristwatch to run and demanding "absolute perfection" from it. 3. My own "musings" do not equate the expectati...
Function
By: BDLJ : August 17th, 2009-20:28
To use sdtom's analogy: This is not a matter of accuracy or degrees of function (0-60 times, top speed), this is a matter of even perfoming (engine starting) in the first place. I dislike the artificial dichotomy between quartz and mechanical movements th...
Nobody/Nothing is perfect!
By: Mirian : August 17th, 2009-19:16
I would like to offer some of my opinions. 1) First, there is virtually nothing perfect in today world. It's possible that impossible happens; Tiger Woods failed to win the PGA despite we all expected him to win on Sunday. 2) As consumer, we expect better...