I usually wear my Seiko Titanium, or my vintage Ball gold Trainmaster. Have a couple of Seiko Railroad watches, and a Gruen Titanium, but I prefer the Titanium . . . very, very light.
I usually wear my Seiko Titanium, or my vintage Ball gold Trainmaster. Have a couple of Seiko Railroad watches, and a Gruen Titanium, but I prefer the Titanium . . . very, very light.
Make your enemies by choice, not by chance - Alfred Bester
"Intelligence is not the ability to regurgitate information. It is the ability to make sound decisions on a consistent basis "--me
"Just remember, when you are talking to the average person, you are talking to a television set"--RDJB
One Big Ass Mistake America
Rob,
I've had 2 Rolex's over the last 20 years. A Date Just, and Sub Mariner. They were good for the WOW factor, but didn't keep time nearly as well as my current piece which is a stainless Omega Sea Master that I've had for the last 8 years. I think you can still get them new at places like Costco and Sam's for around $1100.00, and I love mine.
My Omega is very well worn, and I NEVER take it off. Land, Sea or Air, it's always performed very well.
"The war against this enemy is more than a military conflict. It is the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century and the calling of our generation." George W. Bush
Jesus said to him, I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me. John 14:6
I have the non-date model.
It survived several patrols aboard a submarine (an environment that killed many a G-Shock and even an Omega). It's also survived the last couple years working in an industrial environment. It has some scratches, but is still beautiful and the crystal is flawless. I wear it in a filthy dangerous industrial workplace, but it can be cleaned up and worn with a suit for a wedding reception. It is understated, elegant, and rugged no matter what the situation.
There are watches out there that have more panache among the well-heeled watch collecting crowd, but everyone knows Rolex.
I'll go farther and state that mine is worth every penny.
I received a Tudor Chronograph upon graduation from high school in 1984. I have worn it just about every day since. It's nice in that back then Tudor was still using Rolex cases and bands. Sucks when you have to get it worked on though. You end up paying Rolex prices for parts and labor on your Tudor. I tried to post a pic but it apparantly is too big. i'll see if I can find a smaller picture.
Team Virginia Arms member
USPSA Limited B and Production C shooter, IDPA SSP-SS
formerly known as TacticalShooter
I haven't seen one of these mentioned: Tissot T-Touch
It may not be the most beautiful or expensive watch, but I bought it whilst in Switzerland a couple months ago, so it means a lot to me. For those who don't know, once the watch is put into touch mode, you can just touch the face to select barometer, compass, thermometer, altimeter, alarm or chrono. The compass is the coolest, because it turns the hands into the dial of a compass.
Instructor: Sniper, Carbine, Handgun, Shotgun
Armorer: Glock, Colt AR15/M16
NRA Life Member
I wear a 1977 vintage Rolex "Double Red" Sea-Dweller. Owned it since it was new.
Yes, I agree. My first "good watch" was a Tudor chrono. Funny how it's looked at by some as a "wanna-be Rolex" until you need a little something done, then it's status increases.
Still, even though I'm more of an Omega nut, I've gotta say that Tudor has been one of the very best watches I've had.
The band on my Sea Master is worn out after6 years... around $500 for a new one, WOW.
"The war against this enemy is more than a military conflict. It is the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century and the calling of our generation." George W. Bush
Jesus said to him, I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me. John 14:6
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