Show me your watch!

In no way should you pay luxury watch prices for a smart watch, which will be obsolete in a few years and practically worthless.
Remember those first-gen Apple watches? The ones made of actual gold that sold for $15k-20k just 6 years ago? The ones that stopped receiving software updates, like, three years ago, assuming they even still charge? Yeah, that.

—Patrick
 
Hey Poe, have you heard of a watch brand called Theodora's? As far as I can tell it's a fairly new Taiwanese watch brand, so I can't really find many reliable reviews of their performance.

I ask because I was in a department store today with my wife and we saw a pair of nice-looking watches at the Theodora's stall, and we'd be interested in getting them, but not if they're shitty watches.
 
Hey Poe, have you heard of a watch brand called Theodora's? As far as I can tell it's a fairly new Taiwanese watch brand, so I can't really find many reliable reviews of their performance.

I ask because I was in a department store today with my wife and we saw a pair of nice-looking watches at the Theodora's stall, and we'd be interested in getting them, but not if they're shitty watches.
I've not heard of them, but looking them up they look almost identical to Vincenzo, a similar fashion brand. They're probably using the same movements, most likely quartz manufactured in China, Japan or Taiwan (or sometimes Malaysia) with their branding added to it.

Which doesn't mean it's bad, but there's nothing unique about it and you can probably find the exact same watches on Amazon or Alibaba for cheaper, just without the branding.
 
The buttons work. One of the little watch faces indicates the day of the week, one of them is a 24 hour clock, and one can be used to show the time in another place.
"Chronograph style" then. Not a chronograph but made to emulate the look of a three dial chronograph.
 
And because not everyone is a watch nerd like me, allow me to explain what these terms mean. A chronograph is a wrist watch with built in stopwatch functionality, popularized by racecar drivers in the 60s that wanted to time their laps. Especially in mechanical watches, a chronograph is a very complex feature (called a complication) and any mechanical watch with a chronograph complication will automatically be a higher price because they're simply harder to make. So this style of watch became a status symbol, hence why a lot of brands emulate it.

The classic chronograph style has two or three subdials as well as two pushers on either side of the crown. In a true chronograph, the second hand will actually be stationary and won't activate until you press the top pusher, acting as the stop watch. The running seconds is instead displayed by one of the subdials, in this picture it's the dial to the 9oclock position

IMG_20230416_195339.jpg


Pressing the top pusher activates or deactivates the main second hand, which will then travel around the face counting number of seconds passed. The top and bottom subdials display the number of minutes and hours passed (or just minutes in a two subdial configuration) and all of them are reset with the bottom pusher, all while never interrupting the hour or minute hands of the main dial.

In the picture I have here, the top dial counts up to 30 minutes passed, while the bottom dial has hours and half hours, up to 12
 
And because I love chronographs, here's another in a 60's style two subdial setup in what is usually known as a "Panda" face

IMG_20230416_200647.jpg


Because it's not currently active, the main hand as well as the subdial to the right are straight up and down, while the running seconds is to the left.

Fun fact: Hamilton was the first watch manufacturer to create an automatic winding chronograph, of which this is a reissue of.


Also these both have the wrong time and date because I haven't wound them in awhile, they're a little too expensive for me to wear at work.
 
And because I love chronographs, here's another in a 60's style two subdial setup in what is usually known as a "Panda" face

View attachment 44463

Because it's not currently active, the main hand as well as the subdial to the right are straight up and down, while the running seconds is to the left.

Fun fact: Hamilton was the first watch manufacturer to create an automatic winding chronograph, of which this is a reissue of.


Also these both have the wrong time and date because I haven't wound them in awhile, they're a little too expensive for me to wear at work.
I have a watch with this style of chronograph somewhere around here. I think it needs a new battery and there's something wrong with the 'second' hand - it always resets to 2 seconds instead of the 12 position.

I'm off to class now but I'll have to remember this thread to post the watch my wife gave me when we got engaged!
 
I have a watch with this style of chronograph somewhere around here. I think it needs a new battery and there's something wrong with the 'second' hand - it always resets to 2 seconds instead of the 12 position.

I'm off to class now but I'll have to remember this thread to post the watch my wife gave me when we got engaged!
In the case of a quartz chronograph, it probably just needs to be calibrated. Since it's not using mechanical gears and springs to operate, which is how a mechanical chronograph works, instead it just has a little electric motor that moves it back to zero, and you just need to calibrate what that zero is. If you Google the make and chronograph reset you can find instructions
 
In the case of a quartz chronograph, it probably just needs to be calibrated. Since it's not using mechanical gears and springs to operate, which is how a mechanical chronograph works, instead it just has a little electric motor that moves it back to zero, and you just need to calibrate what that zero is. If you Google the make and chronograph reset you can find instructions
I'll have to find it and get the battery changed and then reset it. It is a nice watch.

I will post my fancy engagement watch tomo, I sleepy now. Forgot I had work after class and it's white wine and scritch the dog time.
 
And because I love chronographs, here's another in a 60's style two subdial setup in what is usually known as a "Panda" face

View attachment 44463

Because it's not currently active, the main hand as well as the subdial to the right are straight up and down, while the running seconds is to the left.

Fun fact: Hamilton was the first watch manufacturer to create an automatic winding chronograph, of which this is a reissue of.


Also these both have the wrong time and date because I haven't wound them in awhile, they're a little too expensive for me to wear at work.
I love that band. Is it a particular style?
 
Daddy (me, I'm daddy) got his watch working again!

View attachment 44489
If it's gonna be quartz, might as well be from the inventors of quartz technology, Seiko. That and they make handsome pieces.

Their kinetic line attempts to combine the spinning rotor of an automatic wind with a battery operated quartz, where the rotor instead turns a tiny generator that's supposed to help recharge the battery.
 
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