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For me, an investment is something that I NEED or VALUE in my life and long term: stock, real estate, companies in which I invest. Not cars, watches, painting, art,... all those things whose cost I forget as soon as I use my credit card. Things that I would be upset to lose or to be robbed of but that would not fundamentally change my life.I once flooded my Omega Seamaster Diver when I somehow forgot to tighten the crown in the swimming pool. I was lucky it happened in the pool not in salt water. I took it for complete service at a Swiss watch repair center the next day (the staff and technicians were actually Swiss) and it was all OK after the repair. I think that it cost me around $100 or so. Although I do have it checked in a pressure pot every few years after battery change and it checks out OK, I never took the watch into water of any kind since I flooded it. I only wear it occasionally. It is around 35 years old now and has great sentimental value for me. I'll pass it on to my son some day. I wear a much less expensive "dive watch" when I teach in the pool now. I don't wear a dive watch in openwater at all. I have redundant dive computers that do the job for diving.
For me, an investment is something that I NEED or VALUE in my life and long term: stock, real estate, companies in which I invest. Not cars, watches, painting, art,... all those things whose cost I forget as soon as I use my credit card. Things that I would be upset to lose or to be robbed of but that would not fundamentally change my life.I buy them as investment pieces. It would cost me thousands annually to service them. Rolex maintenance is cheap comparatively. $100-$200? Ha ha. Good luck. Breguet, Patek and AP much more to maintain. I adjusted the time on my Breitling and didn't tighten the crown properly before diving it. Shlt happens. Oops. Don't know any "collectors" of Tags.
For me, an investment is something that I NEED or VALUE in my life and long term: stock, real estate, companies in which I invest. Not cars, watches, painting, art,... all those things whose cost I forget as soon as I use my credit card. Things that I would be upset to lose or to be robbed of but that would not fundamentally change my life.
For me, an investment is something that I NEED or VALUE in my life and long term: stock, real estate, companies in which I invest. Not cars, watches, painting, art,... all those things whose cost I forget as soon as I use my credit card. Things that I would be upset to lose or to be robbed of but that would not fundamentally change my life.
My view (unless you are a professional in it): if you buy something and still think about the price or the cost the next day, return it.
Buying a Submariner as a diving watch is an egotistic pointless exercise. ...
for watches, the depth rating is a static depth.....so your watch will survive to 1000 ft if just sitting in a basket being lowered down.Sea Dweller and Deep Sea? Just more of the same as Submariner except, bigger, clunkier, heavier and more expensive. As I recall, the depth limit for NDL diving is still 130 feet. Who needs a watch certified for over 1000?
Hmmm. What do you think about the Rolex Sea-Dweller and Rolex Deepsea?
rx7diver
My question then is whether a 3000 foot rated watch is less likely to leak at 100 feet than a submariner rated to 1000?