Watches NEWS
Erroyl E30 Heritage Review
In the sub $500 price range, there are plenty of sport watches, tool watches, pilots watches, etc�� While these might be the watches we typically wear, and cover on w&w, every collection, nay every person, needs at least one dress or formal watch to wear. Whether your personal style just leans more towards the formal, you need to dress conservatively for work, or you need the right watch to match to your suit for the odd wedding: it's unavoidable.Well, Australian newcomer Erroyl seeks to change this with their first series of watches, the E30 Heritage line. Designed to be as handsome as it is affordable, the E30 features sapphire crystals, a Miyota 9015 and a price point of only $283. This makes the E30 an interesting offering as it's not only one of the few mechanical dress/casual pieces under $500, it's one of the least expensive watches to be powered by the 9015. The question is, is it worth it's modest price tag?Erroyl E3 Heritage ReviewCase: PolishedMovement: Miyota 9015Dial: S
Introducing: The Audemars Piguet Perpetual Calendar 26574 In Yellow Gold (Exclusive Live Pics & Details)
The arrival of a new perpetual calendar Royal Oak from Audemars Piguet is something watch collectors don't take lightly. It was AP, after all, who was the very first manufacture to produce a perpetual wristwatch with leap year indicator all the way back in the 1950s. It was also Audemars Piguet, alongside only Patek Philippe, who would be producing perpetual calendar wristwatches of any kind for the better part of a half-century. The QP has always played an important role in AP's history, and while we showed you the new, updated 41 mm perpetuals a few weeks back, we are now here to show you the fifth model in the lineup – cased in yellow gold. 1 OF 14 All five AP Perpetual Calendar Royal Oaks. This new model – reference 26574BA – remains 41 mm in diameter, and joins the just announced steel and rose-gold examples, both offered with a blue or silver dial. The new yellow-gold example too features a blue tapisserie dial that we have all come to
Is the 15300 not a good buy anymore? - advice needed please
So I was talking to a friend of mine about it, as a friend's friend has his for sale. A black dial mint condition with box and papers, serviced, and is selling for $13,000.He doesn't think it's worth that much, as it was probably bought around this price years ago brand new.I'm slightly doubtful on how well the prices will retain when the prices for the 15202 go lower.I don't care if there is no seconds hand to be honest, I just can't afford 19K at this time for a 15202, but i'm not sure whether it's best to hold off, save some more money, and go for the jumbo a few months down the line instead.Or just pull the trigger and have the RO that I have been craving for so long and be done with it. Then hunt for my first Patek.What do you suggest?
Speedmaster Professional Accuracy?
I've recently purchased a Speedmaster Professional and I've got a question on the accuracy. It's gained 4 minutes in roughly 14 days? I know some machanicals gain or loose a certain amount but what is acceptable? Probably more to the point is it worth sending back to AD, would they adjust it or send back to Omega. How would this compare with a Rolex GMT or Sub?
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