Agreed. In fact, Bulova made the best DD replica there is.
This is what I was getting at previously - all brands have done this to some extent or another, so if we are going to start criticizing them, where is the line drawn? As I said, the only clear line that people here agree on is if it's legal or not. The forum is obviously free to set their own rules, but the legal boogeyman seems overkill to me. If a company is coming after a forum for allowing posts about perfectly legal products, then to me that is a company that is overly abusive and controlling.
It seems that if larger companies do these "homage" watches, they are less likely to face the same level of criticism that smaller companies face. This Bulova DD and the Seiko models that look very similar are good examples of how common this is, but they don't appear to generate the same level of scorn as the smaller companies do.
Steinhart is often cited as one of the "worst" offenders. I've serviced a few, and every one I've had in my shop has been a solid watch. They all don't necessarily look like something else - this one I don't believe it trying to emulate another watch, at least if it is they have done it so poorly that I'm not sure what the watch would be...
ETA 2824-2 inside:
After a full service, timing checks look very good:
Passes pressure test to 10 bar easily:
Certainly not "rubbish" by any measure...
For those with very delicate sensibilities, you might want to skip this next photo...
Clearly a hulk or whatever the name is "homage"...not my style at all, because the real one is ugly too. This one came in just for a quick repair - rotor would spin on manual winding. Checked the timing before I opened it:
Sellita SW200-1, and It doesn't get much better than this:
Delta of just over 5 seconds, and the average rate at +0.5 seconds per day. This exceeds COSC, METAS, and Rolex's internal "trust us" Superlative standard...reversing wheels were jammed, so cleaned the automatic and it was back working fine (common issue on the ETA and Sellita movements of this type).
Pressure test to 10 bar all good:
Could have tested both of these to deeper depths certainly, but customers didn't require it, and I'm sure they would have passed.
Would I buy either of these? Nope. Do I think less of someone who does? Nope.
Cheers, Al