No fancy polishing, no glossy enamel, no brittle ceramic or cf, just really well put together fit for purpose watches. There are a lot of German brands in that space like Damasko but IMHO when you actually get them in hand and can see and feel the weight
Cazalea Opinion, explained for 5-year old - don't go in the water with a watch on unless it's a dive watch. Seiko Opinion: expressed as a chart SINN opinion: In order to use a watch safely when swimming we recommend a compression resistance of at least 10
THIS COMES FROM ISO and applies to ordinary watches ISO has created a watch water resistance specification ISO 22810:2010 Testing of a watch consists of: 1. Resistance when immersed in water at a depth of 10 cm. Immersion of the watch in 10 cm of water fo
Dear Purists, me and a friend of mine have had a discussion on how comfortable a wristwatch can be, depending on the shape of its case back. We've focused our attention especially on flat and domed case backs, such the ones of - respectively - the AP ROO
IWC's Top Gun Perpetual and Doublechrono: [IMG]http://i114.photobucket.com/albums/n257/craniotes/IWC%20Top%20Gun%20Perpetual%20Calendar/TG_BPPC-DC.jpg[/IMG] And JLC's NSA Incursion: [IMG]http://i114.photobucket.com/albums/n257/craniotes/JLC%20NSA%20Incurs
Just landed today, and no, I don't foresee it coming off my wrist anytime in the near future: First impressions? Well, it's large. Really large. Mind you, I'm no stranger to big watches, what with an IWC Top Gun Doppel, Sinn U1000 S and Rolex DSSD among o
As far as tool divers go, UTS competes with the best of the best, IMO. From your list, I own two Rolexes (a 16800 matte-dial and DSSD), GO (Sport Evo GMT) and Kobold (stainless steel SEAL), and in no way, shape or form does my UTS 3000M suffer in comparis