Doc Savage
·For me that's an easy choice my great granddad's Model 6 Grade 89 Illinois made in 1917. It's not the best timekeeper that I have or the finest movement but it's a decent watch and it has family history.
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For me that's an easy choice my great granddad's Model 6 Grade 89 Illinois made in 1917. It's not the best timekeeper that I have or the finest movement but it's a decent watch and it has family history.
Sorry, no way I am a watch aholic and I have to have a variety of watches, but I’ll pick one: my 1968 speed master tool watch.
Before you decide, tell me - could you even be a One Watch Guy (or One Watch Girl)?
If so, what would be your one watch collection? Or if you are already there, what IS your one watch collection? Is this one watch already in your multi-watch collection? If it is, why do you have the others?
I am really curious what one watch could do it for you. I sometimes dream about being a one watch guy, but I know my love of variety in this hobby wouldn't allow it.
I'll go first. If I had to reduce to a single watch, it would be the PO 39.5 I got last month. I have been chasing other, cheaper PO substitutes for several years now, and I finally said "screw it" and bought the ultimate watch, and it's amazing. However, I wouldn't want to dump the other 17, so I guess I am a slave to my desire for options.
How about you? Are you also a watch hoarder, or could you go full Marie Kondo and make the ultimate simplification of your life?