jkingrph
Practically Family
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- Jacksonville, Tx, West Monroe, La.
I just received this one, a Ball Trainmaster Roman with tritium hour dots and vials in in hour minute, and second hand.
I have a soft spot in my heart for Ball watches, as you might gather from my avatar.I just received this one, a Ball Trainmaster Roman with tritium hour dots and vials in in hour minute, and second hand.
Yes Seiko produces fine wristwatches, my first good watch was a Seiko "Sportsmatic" from the 1960s given to me by my mother when I was still in high school. I must have worn that thing for some 20 years before having it serviced, the servicing did more harm than good thanks to the bonehead of a watchmaker that worked on it.Mike I like the Seiko best. Cool design that not too many people have and that venerable old automatic movement is incredibly efficient and unkillable - not as pretty as a Swiss movement but in some ways better, it will run and take abuse for 25 years without a service.
This is evocative of the "Quartz Crisis" that creamed the global mechanical watch industry in the 1960s & 70s. Fortunately many of the best watch companies managed to survive & ultimately revive, although many hallowed names were forever lost in the maelstrom.This is a good article on the challenges the Swiss watchmaking industry is facing.
The very short version: young people aren't buying expensive Swiss watches as they aren't "into" the hobby of buying expensive mechanical watches having grown up with cheap alternatives and, more recently, cell phones and, now, Apple Watch. Also, there is less luxury spending coming out of China, but the generational issue seems to be the bigger challenge for the industry.
As someone who has never paid more than about $200+ for a watch - and those few have been vintage timepieces, I have no real connect to the rarefied air of thousands, tens-of-thousand and, even, hundreds-of-thousands-of-dollar timepieces, but I would love to see the Swiss watchmaking industry survive.
I'm sorry that this is a firewall site, but sometimes if you Google something like "WSJ Swiss Watch Industry" it will get you past the firewall as (I've read) papers like the WSJ use it as an unadvertised way to give out free samples of their articles.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-time-running-out-for-the-swiss-watch-industry-1520867714
I have a soft spot in my heart for Ball watches, as you might gather from my avatar.
I don't know which Swiss automatic movement was massaged by Ball for inclusion in your wristwatch, but I'm confident that it's an excellent movement. I think that your model has a see-thru sapphire caseback, you might even be able to discern the base manufacturer's markings on the movement.
Those micro gas tubes are a real wonderment, shining brightly even in complete darkness, requiring no preliminary exposure to a source of light. Apparently the tritium enclosed in those tubes will last for about 25 years, meanwhile those suckers will glow day & night, always there when you need them.
I see that you are also partial to a stainless steel bracelet. While leather straps are fine & dandy & evoke a classic look, it's an expensive pain to have to replace them every couple of years, at least on a daily wear wristwatch.
Congrats for having acquired a very nice timepiece which I'm sure you'll enjoy for years to come.
Yes Seiko produces fine wristwatches, my first good watch was a Seiko "Sportsmatic" from the 1960s given to me by my mother when I was still in high school. I must have worn that thing for some 20 years before having it serviced, the servicing did more harm than good thanks to the bonehead of a watchmaker that worked on it.
Seiko also made some interesting alarm watches.
Over the years Seiko has carried on its tradition of producing very good wristwatches. The ultimate models are those outputted under the "Grand Seiko" label. If I didn't already have too many timepieces kicking around, I wouldn't mind picking one of those up.
Looking back now I just laugh at myself for having walked around wearing junky black plastic battery watches with those digital readouts that became illegible in the light, boasting a bunch of nerdy knobs around the case circumference respecting which I couldn't ever remember how to invoke their functionality.
Among my father's effects I found a pristine unused Bell-Matic in his watch box, for some reason never worn by him. He likely picked it up in the 1970s. Powered by the Seiko 17j automatic movement, it has a lovely medium blue dial with day/date indications. I consider it to be an ideal daily wear watch which in addition to displaying the day & date, also features that super-handy alarm function.Back in 1970 one of our flight surgeons was making a little extra by bootlegging Seiko watches out of SE Asia. I bought a Seiko Bellmatic in a gold tone off him and wore it daily for about 15 years, until it got rather shabby looking. Just recently I found a pristine unused model on ebay, the only difference being the new one shows day and date vs the old one which only shows date.
Among my father's effects I found a pristine unused Bell-Matic in his watch box, for some reason never worn by him. He likely picked it up in the 1970s. Powered by the Seiko 17j automatic movement, it has a lovely medium blue dial with day/date indications. I consider it to be an ideal daily wear watch which in addition to displaying the day & date, also features that super-handy alarm function.
I got the:
-Casio Wave Ceptor WV57H, silver (for allround)
-TCM (Tchibo) quartz diver watch, black-silver plastic (for wildlife)
-Festina 16170/4 (for special events)
-Casio F-91W-1YEF (for allround)
-Rivado (Karstadt) pocket watch RIGA 30296-13M (for allround)
I would never again buy such a heavyweight stainless steel watch like the Festina! Yesterday, I researched after the weight and it got 154 grams! No wonder, it's such a heavy rock.
Even the Casio Wave Ceptor with resin-body got still around 97 grams, but that's okay for me. So, 100 grams seems to be my absolute limit on wrist watches.
The Casio F91 is of course perfect with its 21 grams. But I love especially the flatness and minimalism.
My low-priced Tchibo plastic diver watch for wildlife/hobby is very comfortable leightweight, too, but got the typical bulkier diver watch-body.
But I tell you, now, my pocketwatch became indeed my favorite! You got a nice watch with you and you don't have to wear a watch body on your arm.