rbob99
·IMO the dealer was dishonest. He wanted you to think it was serviced, and he knew it wasn't. When you discovered it wasn't and confronted him, he spouted gobbledygook. If he's lying about one thing he's probably lying about others.
Yeah, fraudulent advertising. Serviced means full service. If not, then don't say it.
Yes I have personally sampled some of the retired watchmaker wares. He was likely sacked for being shit at his job or more likely never had anything to do with Omega in the first place.
Doesn’t Omega or other of the big brand manufacturers issue some kind of document to service partners stating what must be done (at a minimum required level) to qualify a service? This is known practice in automotive and machinery business.
This would OFC be before internalising the service work.
This is assuming that the watch in question has been to a factory authorized service provider. The OP bought it from a dealer who had his “in house” watchmaker look at it- which we have gleaned is the guy took the back off and made sure it was running- perhaps tweaked the regulator to get it closer to on-speed (serviced for time keeping) which is BS anyway because regulating a watch that hasn’t been serviced is like advancing or retarding the timing on a car to make it run better despite it being way overdue for a service.
I know OPs question and have read the thread. I am asking in general terms...
So who is the dealer? He wouldn't be Vienna-based, would he? 😉
I think there are four terms, and serviced is the one you see all the time: Serviced, Cleaned, Regulated, and Oiled. The OP got a regulated watch. In my mind serviced and cleaned are the same thing, and regulation comes with both. Is that a correct assumption? I figure serviced includes all the items in the list, but after reading this post, I think I may start asking for specifics.
This link has a pretty good rundown on what is included in a watch service. https://blog.crownandcaliber.com/watch-maintenance-101-part-2/