Thanks for sharing. Very helpful!
I would not have known that from a real one, very pro operation making these. I bet a fair few million will get made selling this junk
Thanks for sharing. Very helpful!
It seems they are having another go at selling it to some unsuspecting punter:
http://webshop.cashconverters.co.uk/...-116610ln-2014
They must now know its a fake so does this now constitute a fraud ?
Prats !
I have to laugh at the description:
Alternatively, I suppose that you can wear the watch with the bezel protector fitted!THE BEZEL IS FITTED WITH THE OPTIONAL PLASTIC BEZEL PROTECTOR WHICH CAN BE EASILY TOOK OFF IF REQUIRED.
Someone might write directly to the CEO of Cash Converters, pointing out that someone in their company (perhaps someone who's made a bad error and is trying not to suffer the financial consequences of that error?) is deliberately attempting etc etc
I am puzzled. Cash Converters seem to be claiming that they have checked and verified the authenticity of this watch..which had been withdrawn from sale.
So just what is going on? It would indeed be fraud to knowingly sell a fake...so I assume they believe , after checks, that it is legitimate?
No wonder I stick to ADs these days.
Seems they are selling fake Cartier too...
https://mobile.twitter.com/cash_conv...Ctwgr%5Eauthor
That fake sub is for sale at my local chav converters they may well belive its real as I doubt any of the staff could read or write let alone tell a fake sub from a real one.
Anyway why would anyone want to buy a real one with the ad experience when you could have the chav converters experience of buying a fake from illiterate monkeys while surrounded by stolen power tools and breathing in the b o and stale fag scented air.
I wonder how quickly they would hand over cash and how much if you took a fake with that sort of set of B/P to them?
I was abroad when you posted about the fake's apparent reappearance; unfortunately the link is no longer "live."
I would like to follow this up (I sit on a trade council with CC), so do you or anyone else have a saved copy / cache of the watch when it was readvertised?
Thankyou,
Haywood
http://webcache.googleusercontent.co...-116610ln-2014
but seems I can only get the text only version to load so not sure how much use it is to you.
Thankyou very much - it's a start ! Can any member confirm that on the full listing one could see the same warranty card / case number as that of the fake which I illustrated to start this thread, 19P4R824 ?
Bearing in mind their usual "optimistic" pricing, it is odd that they asked only £3,999 for this 116610LN, a watch which typically might get the best part of a thousand pounds more.......if real.
Thanks again,
H
Here are the images from the advert, I'd suggest downloading them yourself to keep a copy as they are currently hosted by CC.
Also have a copy of the html of the advert in pdf which would confirm (by image name) what images were used in the advert, if you pm me a email address I can send you this.
http://ccuk-product-images.cashconve...superLarge.jpg
http://ccuk-product-images.cashconve...superLarge.jpg
http://ccuk-product-images.cashconve...superLarge.jpg
http://ccuk-product-images.cashconve...superLarge.jpg
http://ccuk-product-images.cashconve...superLarge.jpg
http://ccuk-product-images.cashconve...superLarge.jpg
In short yes, it looks like they had put the watch back up for sale,
card as presented to Haywood around 29th March
card as published by CC on 4th Apr
In between those dates, we had identified his watch definitively as a fake for our customer, who went and obtained a refund on that basis.
Anyone else slightly disturbed to see a watch with the same case number (and identical, incorrect clasp date code etc) offered for sale as genuine only days later?
Sniff. Sniff. What is that ?
Last edited by Haywood_Milton; 17th April 2016 at 23:14.
I would expect the store manager to have some pretty searching questions to answer. If the papers got hold of that, the company's high-ups wouldn't like resulting negative publicity one bit I should think.
A quick search on the site reveals 13 Rolex listed. Make you wonder about the rest...
Last edited by Padders; 15th April 2016 at 13:20.
I presume that at some point, the sale of such a fake can be seen as potential fraud. If any retailer has been informed the watch is a fake, and continues to try to sell it as genuine, well, draw your own conclusions.
Not suprising with chav converters "business practices" has any body reported it to the police ?
Last edited by Haywood_Milton; 15th April 2016 at 13:41.
The quality of fake Rolex watches these days really is quite scary, anyone who is considering a 'non-AD' purchase needs to get some serious homework in to educate themselves in spotting fakes. A pre-owned Rolex needs the back off before purchase (you would need to have the correct case-
back die and wrench if the seller does not have one. Also you need a 30X jewellers loupe to inspect the surface finish of the sides and bottom of the serial number having previously viewed a 'pukka one' in detail.
What a minefield! Most guys could not go to all this faff and the solution really is to buy from the AD or someone you totally trust who is the original owner if buying pre-owned.
An interesting bracelet on this 116520 that cash converters have.
http://webshop.cashconverters.co.uk/...a-rolex-116520
I learned a lot from this post, so thank you for your expertise!
Can I ask a question about the watch face and it's fakery?
I noticed you picked up on faults that prove it was a fake on everything but the face/hands/dial/bezel etc.
Where there clear faults on that area of the watch that weren't mentioned or was it done quite well - on that part I spent 20 minutes looking at it and comparing it. It wasn't, disturbingly, far off the real thing to my non-expert eye.
Thanks
Edit: I noticed your cyclops comment, so thanks again!
Last edited by Siac; 15th April 2016 at 15:35.
AAAHGHH I'm in duplicate post Hell! LOL
What this thread demonstrates to me is that it is virtually impossible for a normal watch buyer to detect a fake like this. Anyone who trusts their own judgement needs to be very skilled indeed.
It's a bad situation, and getting worse.
At what point does the cost of producing a convincing fake including the time involved to manufacture it make it a futile exercise? Some of these fakes are quite well made and I presume some time, effort and cost has gone into making them. Are we talking £200 or £1000 to make something like this. Purely interested for educational purposes obviously!
Crown position on that fake Rolex looks all wrong to me, not familiar with the latest models but on my old Sea-Dweller the crown sat more above the case band than below. On all the fake SDs I saw this was the other way round as its a fundamental side effect of the difference between the Rolex and ETA clone faker movements. Similarly when one unscrews the crown it was the case for a long period of Rolex's history that you turn the crown to adjust the time in the opposite direction to ETA movements (ISTR don't have any ETAs now for several years). I guess a faker could go to the lengths to correct those things and make a watch with a movement whose crown action works and feels like a Rolex, however on one level if they did that they would be doing better than most Swiss manufacturers out there as none of em at the cheaper end I have sampled make a crown feel as sturdy yet smooth working like Rolex.
Was going to place a bid at a local auction house for a rolex and decided to wait until I educate myself more on what to look out for, so thank you for posting this
It's amazing a shop would even consider to sell something knowing it's not the genuine thing.
Was talking with a guy the other day who has a couple of fake Rolex, he is constantly comparing them to my sub, he doesn't hide the fact they are fake, it's a laugh for him. What worried me was all the research he is doing on Rolex as he wants a real one, is that he has found what he calls a "perfect fake" online for around a £1000. Why spend so much on a fake? For crying out loud, get a real one.
It is one thing for twits to talk nonsense and throw their money at rubbish from websites which don't pretend to offer anything else.
It is quite another for high street UK retailers to offer a fake watch at close to what would be full market price for a real one, to describe it as real and either not have half a chuffing clue about what they are selling or offer it with full knowledge of what they are selling.
At least in 2012 the prices asked for fakes gave buyers a clue :
http://www.croydonadvertiser.co.uk/C...ail/story.html
H
I presume Rolex is targeted by fakes more than any other brand due to the high profile. Reading this there is no way I'd buy a pre owned given the such high quality of copying these days. Except from very long standing members of this forum of course.