ZIELSZIEK
·We decided to see if this is real or fake for under £45 ($56) - is everything on Wish a fake? We'll see...
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We decided to see if this is real or fake for under £45 ($56) - is everything on Wish a fake? We'll see...
They are fakes, just like almost everything on Wish, sadly. There has been an ongoing discussion on my local watch forum about them since somebody decided to flood our local market with these...The NH36 marked dial gives it away instantly. Pic from my local forum.
We thought about it, and since they're using pictures of the real watch in the sale, and we saved the webpage and screenshots just in case, then we can report the charge as fraud/fake and get refunded. We used ApplePay so that they can't take a credit card number and use it anywhere else.
If it's real or fake, it was just going to be a gift someday, as I already own the genuine PADI turtle, PADI Solar save the seas, and the Blue Lagoon LE Turtle. But, typically for $50 you can get a fake Rolex, so we thought that maybe the price was high enough to be the real deal for a B-stock or cosmetically flawed Seiko (maybe even used).
I'm glad things are different where you live. In my country, in order to prove that a watch is fake, one needs to send the product to an authentication establishment run by the government in order to file a return based on an item being non-geniune with the whole procedure being a mess of paperwork. I guess paying by PayPal would be a different story, but I doubt Wish would accept that.
I'm well aware of the fact that you're an experienced collector as I have seen your posts, I have only posted the pic in order to highlight the major discrepancies between the real and genuine turtle.
The irony of it all is the fact that under the hood that turtle has a genuine NH36, some even have the rotor that says 4R36, so it's not 100% fake.
I set myself a challenge during this lock in isolation period to buy a watch. Any watch.
But it has to be £50 Max (or the equivalent currency). Just for fun.
Something that I liked the look of and would wear during the lockdown period. Or look to break even more.
Was happy to stumble across this on Ebay that looks like an OK 60s Diver!
Here she is on the wrist and for a cheap diver made me smile on this sunny day.
Anyone else care to join in the fun please post away.
Will be hunting again over the next few days.
Stay safe!
After last week's - virtual - triumph (nice 60s Rodania for 27.50 + pp from UK), in my lockdown-addled imagination I'm pursuing this:
Currently 22.99 GBP, although unfortunately with 5 days to run, so I may need to concede on this one. Interested whether @JwRosenthal ever had one like it. Even if/when I (virtually) lose the 50 pounds challenge, I have however added to my education.
Perhaps this is widely known, but I wasn't aware. The eponymous Jean-Paul Garnier was born in 1801 in France, where he made his career. It's too easy for some of us to become Anglo-centric (and sometimes Swiss-centric): I did not know that Garnier was in fact much more than a watchmaker, and was actually a highly regarded general technologist and engineer in 19th century France - perhaps none of this is news to Francophone OF members. He is popularly remembered for electric clock technology and for superintending the fit-out of the French railway system with station clocks. But the bit that most interested me was that in 1843, he apparently obtained a patent for a species of mechanical calculator, based on his experience with watch engineering. Again, in the Anglo world we are taught that computing began with Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage, then nothing much happened for a century, then Alan Turing came along, then electronics happened. So thanks again for the lockdown challenge, I've gained zero watches and some interesting new knowledge, duly shared.
Back to watches - please can anyone enlighten me, what happened to the Garnier company after about 1960?
Thanks for reading, stay safe, all.
Had tracked a couple that sadly shot up in the last day of bidding.
None the less have a couple of new ones in the Watch List.
Good luck to those participating 👍
After last week's - virtual - triumph (nice 60s Rodania for 27.50 + pp from UK), in my lockdown-addled imagination I'm pursuing this:
Currently 22.99 GBP, although unfortunately with 5 days to run, so I may need to concede on this one. Interested whether @JwRosenthal ever had one like it. Even if/when I (virtually) lose the 50 pounds challenge, I have however added to my education.
Perhaps this is widely known, but I wasn't aware. The eponymous Jean-Paul Garnier was born in 1801 in France, where he made his career. It's too easy for some of us to become Anglo-centric (and sometimes Swiss-centric): I did not know that Garnier was in fact much more than a watchmaker, and was actually a highly regarded general technologist and engineer in 19th century France - perhaps none of this is news to Francophone OF members. He is popularly remembered for electric clock technology and for superintending the fit-out of the French railway system with station clocks. But the bit that most interested me was that in 1843, he apparently obtained a patent for a species of mechanical calculator, based on his experience with watch engineering. Again, in the Anglo world we are taught that computing began with Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage, then nothing much happened for a century, then Alan Turing came along, then electronics happened. So thanks again for the lockdown challenge, I've gained zero watches and some interesting new knowledge, duly shared.
Back to watches - please can anyone enlighten me, what happened to the Garnier company after about 1960?
Thanks for reading, stay safe, all.
I set myself a challenge during this lock in isolation period to buy a watch. Any watch.
But it has to be £50 Max (or the equivalent currency). Just for fun.
Something that I liked the look of and would wear during the lockdown period.
Edit: I was led astray by the equation £50 = US$75. It looks like it's really about sixty bucks, so the ¥8259 I spent overshoots the target by about £10.
We decided to see if this is real or fake for under £45 ($56) - is everything on Wish a fake? We'll see...
https://www.wish.com/product/5dd792486bd5babf8a709baa?share=web
My son tells me, after the fact, that yes, everything on wish.com CAN be fake. The picture with the sale looks like a genuine PADI, but that is not what they are shipping. TBH, I'd only very recently heard of fake video cards on wish.com which made me check out the site - but I hadn't thought that they would take the time to fake a Seiko, or at least all the cosmetic parts. The watch however can be found for $300 from reputable sites, well below the $525 MSRP, so I'm glad they didn't charge me that much and it was $65 out the door after adding $10 shipping.
FAKE
MY GENUINE PADI TURTLE
Fake bezel with wrong lume pip, and the numbers and markers on the bezel are farther out from the dial than they should be. The red lines on the chapter ring at 3, 6, 9, and 12 are thin and faded and don't line up with the hour markers on the dial like my PADI.
The fake dial has very weak lume, and the PADI font is significantly thinner, plus the dial states NH36 (3rd party) and not 4R36 (for Seiko watches). I know there are two dial variations on the PADI that both mention Japan for either the whole watch or for just the movement, but the fake would represent a variation that we have never seen.
Also, the day wheel is not lined up properly in the window for most days of the week, and the font in the date window is wrong (no serif on the 1), so likely even a fake date wheel. The signed Seiko bracelet clasp feels cheap and gritty, and is difficult to close on the wrist unless you wiggle it from side to side when pushing it closed, or press the clasp side buttons, so I'm not sure I'd trust it to put the bracelet on a genuine Seiko watch like my new waffle dial turtle.
If you shine a bright flashlight beam on the real Seiko and the fake, the genuine Seiko is brighter; and 4 minutes later the genuine Seiko is still electrified out the wazoo while the fake dial lume has faded to zero.
I'm taking it to my watchmaker tomorrow. I would be surprised if the movement is a genuine Seiko movement in good working order and properly lubricated, although I have seen new NH36 movements advertised for sale for $59 to the public. And I know my watchmaker will do a movement swap with a genuine movement for $100 parts and labor, so it might be worth the cost of the movement alone. I could return it, gift it, report it for a refund, or it might be a watch to use as the bones for a "mod seiko" with parts from Yobokies or something (doubtful).
I'll likely report this to my credit card company (Goldman Sachs Apple Card via Apple Pay) - the watch was presented as genuine Seiko PADI and I have saved the web page as a webarchive and as a PDF (as well as each picture) as proof that I didn't get what I ordered. It might not even be worth sending back and wasting the postage.