Here's mine. Waiting to get into the supermarket. Worn most days for 10 years.
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It seems that most photo's I see of Rolex for sale or posed photo's always look as though the watch has never been worn and just kept safe as more of an investment not to be marked rather than a watch to be worn and enjoyed.
Here's mine. Waiting to get into the supermarket. Worn most days for 10 years.
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All the Rolex watches on the Friday threads are worn.
Rolex watches are discussed on many threads here.
Why do we need yet another Rolex thread?
Simon
Watches of recent times worn carefully will not show their age.
Hope that’s worn enough
Or this.
But to be fair those bezels are scratch magnets.
Cheers,
Neil.
Great thread. I really enjoy seeing watches being used for their intended purpose or just being worn and enjoyed!
Just sent my expl II to Sean Yates - About Time Watch Repairs - following a recent thread on here and feedback from the OP. As this watch is a keeper for me, with me at the birth of my son and getting married amongst others things, I originally requested a light polish however the final decision to polish or not remains undecided until he's inspected it and we've had a conversation so I feel your pain Mick P!
Time keeping wasn't as good as above, gaining 2.5 seconds every day but not bad for a 13 year old watch with no service history!
Look forward to seeing more watches with some character :)
Jon
Lol.....my mums gardening watch..
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You know how to excite a man !! scary
Christmas just gone I was at a garden center buying a Christmas tree with roots for the garden and a old fellow asked me to give him a lift with a couple of fence panels onto his pickup and I noticed he was wearing a Rolex GMT (don't know what model) which was swinging very loosely on his wrist and banging against the panels, so I asked him if it was real when we had finished, he showed it me and it was really knocked up and he said his wife had bought it for him when he retired and he had worn it ever since day in day out whatever he did and it showed it.
It was nice seeing a guy wear an expensive watch without a care in the world and not thinking of any future resale value.
I wear a Seiko 6159-7000 as my beater and its fun.
Where is Jocke with his Datejust, always makes me laugh as it has more oil on it than Red Adair's jeans!
Edit: found it -
YESSSS Beat that!!
The cleaning solution
All's well in the end
Here is the blog
Last edited by murkeywaters; 25th April 2020 at 19:52.
A truly un-babied DD - worn daily for 11 years !!
I baby my watches - although wear them doing most things - I’d be gutted to have my 16610 looking like that DJ.
It’s a 2010 v serial I bought no’s so I am not replacing or having it polished any time soon.
Each to their own of course. Personally, I feel that watches are for wearing, whilst so many people on here seem ridiculously over cautious (to me, anyway). Any watch will get marks and scratches if worn - so what? However, I realise that some people are only interested in preserving resale value.
I work with a builder who wears his datejust 41 everyday which he bought from new. He’s not a collector, just owns a Rolex and enjoys its use. Its covered in dozens of tiny scratches and gives a nice patina look.
It’s a watch to hand down, not an obsession about value retention.
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Last edited by OllieG; 3rd May 2020 at 14:35.
I know!!
Worn by my dad who’s a doctor would you believe.
No manual labour. He just refused to adjust the bracelet properly and wore it very loose.
I’ve no idea how it got in that state even after saying that, but I winced constantly.
Still, it’s got character and provenance for me, and it’s certainly “under the radar”
I am intending to find out whether it can realistically be refurbished/polished sensibly, once the world starts up again....but it is what it is
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Good for your Dad, I think it has 'character' looking like that.
No way that can be refurbished and look anything like its original state mate. They be some deep deep wounds! Maybe see what a new and bracelet would set you back instead.
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I read this as shoplifter/carpenter, which made me chuckle......
Personally, I don’t see the appeal in battered up watches. Whilst I do not baby my watches, I do wear them carefully. If they get damaged I seek a repair.
Same with my car or my home.
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My GMT bought New in 1994. I wore it 24 hours a day for 17 years clocking up over Four Million Miles.
I then retired it and got a second hand Explorer 2. That was the start of the collecting bug....
Last edited by verv; 4th May 2020 at 16:35.
My best mates dad had an Oyster, it was well and truly looking like he had dropped it under a road roller. We took it to the service centre in the Connaught Building in Hong Kong (the locals call it the building of a thousand ar$£holes) and they told us to pick it up in a few weeks....when it came back it looked brand new. They did an amazing job on it. sadly it was "lost" when he was diving with it a few months later. One day someone is going to find a nice Rolex around "Middle Island" in Repulse bay one day, watch was lost in about 1979....
Great thread, i'm very much in the watches should be worn/used camp. Each ding, scrape and mark is like having an imprint of your life on your wrist. I found that important when I inherited my dad's watch a few years ago.
Anyway, back to lurk mode :)