What time do you wear?


What watch, if any, graces your wrist? Does time matter? You know: time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana. Either way.
khrys
I have owned an Omega Seamaster since 1994. In early 2001, I was living in Germany and it started losing time so I took it to a jeweler who sent it back to Omega Switzerland for an overhaul. It cost me just 400DM ($200) and that included new hands, stem, oring and band parts. They gave me back all of the old parts. I wear the watch almost every day and it is still keeping good time. The red on the hands have faded again a bit, but otherwise the watch still looks great. Since being back in the US, I have been wondering what I should do when it is time for another servicing.
awci.com american Watchmakers Clockmakers Institute. Lists certified watchmakers in your area.
This thread seems to perpetuate the same theme we see in audiophilia. Enthusiasts excitedly talk about the intricacies and emotional delights of owning a beautiful, artpiece created by renowned artisans. Someone comes along and talks about how they don't see the use of having a watch, what with televisions, cell phones, pagers, the sun rising and setting, cocks crowing and all. Yet these very people inhabit this forum, purchase cables more expensive than these watches and argue the same point to people who tell them that with car radios, Ipods, computer speakers, bose speakers, cell phones, not to mention watch radios, what's the use of owning a world class audio system?
This thread led me to the Seiko Orange Monster - quite a nice watch for the price, feels like a much more expensive watch, might get a black monster too.
Pabul57,

Does that model have rough, irritating parts that rub your skin? I ask because while my Seamaster was being serviced I bought a Seiko and then had to return it. It was tearing up my wrist.

Here's a link to it: Seiko

Size and band seem similar to Black Monster.