He did damage the watch. It may have received quite a blow, hard to tell. Tudor are well within their rights in a situation like this. Shame, but there it is.
Incidentally, I’ve been in a similar situation(not with Tudor) , and had to pay.
Hi all, Interested to hear your views on this...
I bought a Tudor Black Bay late last year to give to my son for his 18th Birthday in mid February. He wore it just a handful of times before the country went into lockdown and then a couple of times once restrictions were lifted. Otherwise it was just sat in his bedroom in a safe place.
Early on after receiving it he slightly damaged the bezel and bezel insert, he’s made contact with something, as you can see from the attached picture.
A few weeks back I wound it up for him, and it worked briefly and then just stopped. I made contact with the AD that I bought it from and they duly sent it off to the RSC to be fixed under warranty. There was no suggestion there would be any issues. A few weeks on and the RSC has come back to the AD to say they are refusing to repair it under warranty stating that the impact damage has caused the watch to stop!
Now the Black Bay is no dress watch, it’s marketed as a tool watch and a sports watch and I really don't feel that the damage to the watch should have caused it to stop!
So, my question to you is am I being a bit optimistic in that they should repair the watch under warranty (the non running aspect, I’m not expecting them to repair the cosmetics FOC) or are the RSC digging their heels in where they shouldn’t really be? Would welcome your thoughts.
He assures me the watch has not been dropped and I do believe him on that.
Thanks
Jon
[IMG]A3518322-3ECA-42FA-B9B2-50C753C9B0AC by Jon Billbo, on Flickr[/IMG]
He did damage the watch. It may have received quite a blow, hard to tell. Tudor are well within their rights in a situation like this. Shame, but there it is.
Incidentally, I’ve been in a similar situation(not with Tudor) , and had to pay.
Last edited by paskinner; 2nd October 2020 at 09:51.
Quite annoying but at least a service on a Tudor isn't too bad. £250 or so? He might have knocked it off a door frame and been too scared to admit it?
Definitely within their rights to refuse to repair as damage was through no fault of Tudor. £300 ought to cover it though
Looks like a reasonable scrape taking off a fair amount of bezel metal and damaging the bezel pip if I see that correctly? Doesn’t surprise me Rolex are saying this...think there is no arguing and will just have to pay unfortunately.
So the Tudor Black Bay can't take a slight knock without buggering the movement? Is it made of cheese?
It's not a great advert for them though is it
Just to be clear, i'm not looking for cosmetic damage to be repaired under warranty. The service is about £220 and then but they won't let it go out without a new bezel insert and they want an extra £100 for refurbishing the case/bracelet (although it does also say that's part of the service!)
I'm merely surprised the watch could not withstand this scrape without it breaking. The photo magnifies it but the scrape to the bezel affects less then a centimetre of the circumference, and as for the damage to the bezel lume casing well it's a tiny ring of metal..
Feel for you but...
It looks a fair smack / drop and could easily have caused one of the many moving parts to have jumped and caused a lock up.....
Think I would tug on RSC / AD heart strings a wee bit being for his 18th and first of many Tudor / Rolex he will be acquiring in his life, AD’s do have influence.....
Get it fixed whichever way get it back on his wrist....
Last edited by RustyBin5; 2nd October 2020 at 21:24.
Sorry to hear, but I don’t think it is a warranty matter, and I think all luxury brands would take the same approach.
I would accept the cost, but maybe do a little education as to complexity of mechanical watches, as they don’t do well with impact.
Dave
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
My Tudor BB GMT is off at the menders because of a date wheel issue. Thankfully it's still under warranty...
It's definitely not been dropped. To be fair the AD has worked hard to try and sort it for me. I've a good relationship and this is the 2nd black bay I've bought off him. My eldest has one too... Unfortunately I'm going to have buy a 3rd one too as my youngest son is coming up to his 18th in just over a year...
The problem is whether it was assembled properly to begin with. If it was then the damage inflicted could cause it to stop and if it wasn’t then the damage would cause it to stop. Hard to prove either way.
I don't see how this relates to the OPs situation?
OP - I think it's just unfortunate if Tudor dig their heels in. I have had some experience of watch brands giving good will gestures and offering discounts on the service in situations like this...I'd be trying to pull at their heartstrings for one and highlighting you are a repeat customer!
Looking at the extent of the damage to the bezel, if it hasn't been dropped, it's had a bloody good clattering one way or another.
I don't think Tudor's position is unreasonable.
I believe this will an ETA 2824 movement? Are they prone to things getting stuck? Any chance a sharp whack might dislodge whatever is causing the problem?
I seem to remember reading that some Seiko movements can suffer from a stuck hairspring that can be encourage to move in this way.
Just a thought...
Paying up may be the only way to get it sorted, such is life, however seen as you are paying and they are claiming internal damage can you not ask 'exactly' what damage was found when opened?
I know it may not help you, but if they are 'delicate watches' with a particular inherent weakness you'll be doing the community a service.
How do you know it was a slight knock?
One could argue and say that the case and bezel are so sturdy that a knock impactful enough to damage the movement caused so little damage to the case and the bezel:-)
It is absolutely unrealistic to expect them to cover it under warranty.
I have no issue with Tudor's response, this has been damaged by the user, and they don't know the seriousness of the incident. Maybe buy a G-shock as a daily, and keep this for less active duty.
Did it stop working immediately after the impact that caused the damage to the bezel?
Looks like a big knock to me, the metal surrounding the lune pip is pretty mullered. The movement is shock resistant so one would have to assume it’s a big knock. I think Tudor are within their rights to not repair the movement under warranty.
I can understand why a company may look to avoid repairing accidental damage under warranty; it seems reasonable to me that wear and tear - aka life - isn't covered by warranty!
Still, it is interesting that - if I'm understanding this correctly - Tudor are requiring a refinish and replacement bezel insert as part of the repair. Seems odd to force restoration to as-new condition, or is there something I'm missing here? I thought it was possible to avoid refinishing of watches if you want to avoid unnecessary costs and/or retain original parts and patina (although of course, if your wishes aren't honoured, there's no going back with vintage pieces).
I have a scrape on my Rolex GMT-II 16710 bezel that's still there and a few marks on the case and they let that slide when it went in for a service at St James Square a few years back.
Many people assume that these heavyweight sports or tool watches are pretty bulletproof but anything with a mechanical movement is prone to conking out/ going off time if dropped or given a sharp impact which the Tudor obviously has suffered.
I had one stop when I dropped it about a foot onto a table!
If you want to bash watches around I would recommend quartz TBH and I doubt you will get any joy from Tudor when the impact damage is plain to see.
Cheers,
Neil.
I'd be very surprised if Tudor were forcing the bezel and insert restoration. Normally this goes as an optional extra if anything more than a light polish is required. For example, I used to have an older Black Bay that had a scratched bezel insert. This appeared on the invoice as optional and I chose to have the service without the bezel changed.
The problem with this is that the damage could have been caused by either just a scrape or a seriously hard knock...it's impossible to determine the cause from the outcome. Tudor obviously believe whatever force caused the damage also caused the movement to fail. I'd say on balance of probability, this is a reasonable assumption.
It’s probably just a hooked hairspring, have you tried giving it another knock? Failing that, why not crack the back off and have a look yourself, it’s not going to change the warranty status now?
That watch has had a big knock, look at the damage around the pip and bezel. That’s bound to have put a big old shock into the movement.
Tudor not fixing the movement under warranty doesn’t surprise me.
As someone who does use tool watches as a tool I have a lot of experience at knocks and dings. That looks like quite a bang to do that much damage and take that much metal off.
Sadly, I think Tudor may be well within their rights on this one.
Not what you want to hear, but there it is.
Last edited by matt; 2nd October 2020 at 19:00. Reason: typo
As a matter of interest, what exactly did your son do to cause the damage to his watch?
It’s very possible to do that kind of damage by brushing against a brick wall, for example, without much force and being unlucky. It isn’t necessarily a big drop. We are also looking at a zoomed in picture, which makes things look far worse than they probably are.
I’m not overly surprised about the service being charged but it isn’t a clear and obvious thing to me. The bit about insisting on refinishing is not acceptable though - they have no right to require this.
Last edited by Berty234; 3rd October 2020 at 07:21.