ewand
路After reading Michael Stockton's article on Fratello a few years back - #TBT Seiko 7A38 Chronograph (fratellowatches.com) - I developed a bit of a taste for the Seiko quartz chronographs. For the unfamiliar, the 7A28 movement was the world's first analogue quartz chronograph, and the 7A38 was the first with day and date too. The movement can be fully stripped and serviced.
The 7A28 family is well known with the RAF Gen 1, the Speedmaster (Not all Speedmasters come from Switzerland | Omega Forums) and various other specials as worn in Aliens and a View to a Kill, and even an obscure They Might Be Giants video for a song about the march of time...
Anyway, a few years back I picked up a Seiko 7A38-7029 in an auction, that I really liked - it had a slightly larger than most, dodecagon case shape that has earned it the nickname "Royal Oak", after the AP original...
I showed the watch to a friend who said he really wanted to buy it, so being a good mate, I sold it for pretty much what it cost me - and I set off looking for another.
Fast forward 3+ years, and this popped up on eBay. It was listed as only being available to UK buyers, and it sat for most of its time at a low price - I swooped and bought it for 拢1 less than the max bid I had placed, so managed to outbid a few other people by a whisker.
The cost was a lot of money (in some people's eyes... and nearly 3x what I sold the last one for) for an early 1980s quartz Seiko, but comfortably less than a service of a Speedmaster at an OB. It's cracking 馃榾
The 7A28 family is well known with the RAF Gen 1, the Speedmaster (Not all Speedmasters come from Switzerland | Omega Forums) and various other specials as worn in Aliens and a View to a Kill, and even an obscure They Might Be Giants video for a song about the march of time...
Anyway, a few years back I picked up a Seiko 7A38-7029 in an auction, that I really liked - it had a slightly larger than most, dodecagon case shape that has earned it the nickname "Royal Oak", after the AP original...
I showed the watch to a friend who said he really wanted to buy it, so being a good mate, I sold it for pretty much what it cost me - and I set off looking for another.
Fast forward 3+ years, and this popped up on eBay. It was listed as only being available to UK buyers, and it sat for most of its time at a low price - I swooped and bought it for 拢1 less than the max bid I had placed, so managed to outbid a few other people by a whisker.
The cost was a lot of money (in some people's eyes... and nearly 3x what I sold the last one for) for an early 1980s quartz Seiko, but comfortably less than a service of a Speedmaster at an OB. It's cracking 馃榾