machamp6650
·I saw this point raised by another OF member recently, and it's caused me to reflect on my own experiences.
I've always tended towards the 'this watch is cool and cheap but has a bad dial - no worries, I'll just find a better dial to go with it' kind of thinking as a buyer. Not in all of my purchases, but a few. I have a lot of passion for watches but not a huge amount of money for pristine examples. As a result I always have a backlog of plans for parts purchases and trips to a watchmaker. Lots of project watches.
More recently I stumbled across one of those Huguenin Freres 'prototype speedmaster' cases through a part of the old Watchco network. I thought it would be a fun basis for a fantasy speedy build, along with other parts I'd accumulated along the way. I ended up sending my parts through to a watchmaker who was recommended by a highly reputable source. This person then disappeared and avoided all contact for about a year. Over recent weeks I've been able to resume contact; this person is now demanding hundreds of dollars for their 'time' to return the parts to me.
I find myself quite disillusioned at the moment; I look at my collection and see a lot of watches that need more work, watches that I don't want (bought for the parts), watches where I can only think of the hassle to get them repaired rather than the joy of owning and wearing them. Plus I get to add this experience of being ripped off, by the kind of expert I'm so reliant on to make projects happen.
I'm interested to hear the experiences of other members - what are your views on building a collection through project watches? What are the conditions where it works and doesn't work? Have I just had a bad run? Or are you sworn off project watches altogether?
I've always tended towards the 'this watch is cool and cheap but has a bad dial - no worries, I'll just find a better dial to go with it' kind of thinking as a buyer. Not in all of my purchases, but a few. I have a lot of passion for watches but not a huge amount of money for pristine examples. As a result I always have a backlog of plans for parts purchases and trips to a watchmaker. Lots of project watches.
More recently I stumbled across one of those Huguenin Freres 'prototype speedmaster' cases through a part of the old Watchco network. I thought it would be a fun basis for a fantasy speedy build, along with other parts I'd accumulated along the way. I ended up sending my parts through to a watchmaker who was recommended by a highly reputable source. This person then disappeared and avoided all contact for about a year. Over recent weeks I've been able to resume contact; this person is now demanding hundreds of dollars for their 'time' to return the parts to me.
I find myself quite disillusioned at the moment; I look at my collection and see a lot of watches that need more work, watches that I don't want (bought for the parts), watches where I can only think of the hassle to get them repaired rather than the joy of owning and wearing them. Plus I get to add this experience of being ripped off, by the kind of expert I'm so reliant on to make projects happen.
I'm interested to hear the experiences of other members - what are your views on building a collection through project watches? What are the conditions where it works and doesn't work? Have I just had a bad run? Or are you sworn off project watches altogether?