Bulova Gemini has the look and is in the budget but I can’t find specs for its thickness.
Bulova Gemini has the look and is in the budget but I can’t find specs for its thickness.
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First, collect watches that you like. Very few watches with price tags under 5 figures or high 4-figures are likely to ever appreciate in value, so don’t collect with the idea that the value of your collection will increase unless you’re prepared to part with some serious cash.
Second, take your time. I’m about 4 years into it and my taste has definitely evolved (and probably will evolve further) as I’ve learned more about it and been exposed to more of what’s out there. The variety is nearly endless and you’re almost certainly not aware of most of the choices out there right now. The watches that I bought when I first started I don’t like nearly as much now, and some of the ones I was lusting after when I first started but didn’t actually buy, no longer hold much appeal for me.
Yeah just google for “small seconds” watches - sometimes they’ll be called “sub seconds” as well but the former name is more common. Most of the time the seconds hand will be at 6 o’clock on such watches or occasionally at 9 o’clock. It being in other positions like on this Baltic is a lot less common. You can do some research to see what movements have this function and google for watches that use them - ETA (or Unitas) 6497 and 6498 are common on larger watches, Peseux 7001 sometimes on smaller ones and also SW-261 and there are some other common ones out there.
I don’t think so. A few folks really want something thin that can easily fit under the cuff of a dress shirt. And most of us don’t want something so thick that it looks like a metal ingot on our wrists . So with that in mind like 10-12mm is the sweet spot for most people. But yeah some folks worry about it too much, for instance they’ll prefer a manual wind movement to an automatic one since it might allow the case to be a mm or so thinner, and they’ll lament watches than come in both auto and manual and the manual versions aren’t any thinner.
The Mido Multifort TV Big Date if you can stretch your budget a little bit.
Jomashop sells legit stuff, but it is grey market, meaning you don’t get the manufacturer’s warranty - they do warrant the watch but if something goes wrong you send it back to them and they repair it, vs. if you bought it directly from Hamilton or an authorized Hamilton dealer, you send it back to Hamilton and they fix it.
Basically what happens is Jomashop will buy watches from an authorized dealer that the AD hasn’t been able to sell for whatever, for a reduced price, then sells it to you. So it is legitimate products its just not an official Hamilton sales channel.
If I were you, I’d go visit at least one Hamilton AD in your area and try to negotiate a discount. You may be able to get close or even match the Jomashop price and still get the real warranty. Buying from Jomashop is fine but I’d only do it if you can’t get the watch from a legitimate dealer for close to the Jomashop price. Remember the AD’s never advertise the watch below MSRP, but they usually will negotiate if you come in person and talk to them.
http://www.ranfft.de/cgi-bin/bidfun-db.cgi?10&ranfft&&2uswk&Miyota_8200
Per this it has 45 hour power reserve.