ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX
29 January 2023, 03:19 AM | #1 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Dec 2022
Location: Midwest
Posts: 7
|
Advice on Tudor Price Oysterdate Submariner repair
I purchased a Tudor Prince Oysterdate Submariner from a jeweler on Dec 22nd,
2022. They claimed that it was on consignment from a long time customer and that he was the original owner. About 30 days later, one morning I noted that the date had not changed fully, it was half way between dates. This was about 6am when I picked up the watch. I unscrewed the crown and moved it to the date position and set the date. It went CLICK pretty loudly, and it sure seemed like it took more force to turn than say my Seikos. I thought for a moment that it might not have advanced as it might be running low on power (I for now have an office job, and do not do any heavy activity with the watch other than walking quite a bit). I moved the position of the crown to the one closest to the watch, and it would NOT turn. At all. I stopped (see backstory below) and screwed the crown down. I have some questions, but first a short backstory: Backstory: My father had a watch exactly like this, that his sister purchased for him in Switzerland in the mid 80s. He wore it nearly every day, but then it broke down. It had the same problem that I just described above, but he turned it thinking it was just stuck, and broke it... circa 2013, I decided to have it fixed as a present for him, and I looked online and found what I thought was a reputable rolex/tudor repair person (not an RSC) and sent it off. It came back and worked, (IIRC, it was a LOT, like $700). He used it for a while, and I moved out of state. When I came back, I noticed that he was wearing some cheap off brand watch and asked about it. He told me the following: The watch broke again a few months later. He sent it back to the same guy. It came back, and broke again a few months later. He sent it back to the same guy. They repair person (ok, my father is getting up there in age) told him it would cost too much, and he should just leave the watch as it would also cost a lot to ship back, and it was just not worth it. My father, getting frustrated and shipping back and forth and spending a lot of money (we are not well off by any stretch), agreed to let him keep the Tudor. The present: So here I am, I have been looking for like 10 years for a Tudor Sub (at a "reasonable" price, I found it, and now it breaks in the same fashion (at least from what I see) as my fathers watch. Also of note, we have no local watch repair centers / horologists here. No matter what (RSC or independent) I would have to send it off. I am pretty trigger shy about this after my fathers incident. Questions:
Opinions or advice wanted and appreciated. |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|
*Banners
Of The Month*
This space is provided to horological resources.