Never heard of a Jaws watch, thanks for sharing. Initial thought: looks like a Vostok mod, especially the case design.
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Thought this was interesting. The Alsta Nautoscaph Superautomatic - basically a remake of the watch worn by Richard Dreyfuss in the movie "Jaws".
https://www.alstawatch.com/watches/a...uperautomatic/
Funky little thing - at RRP of £795 is a bit 'lively' price wise but can be had online with 15% off
Never heard of a Jaws watch, thanks for sharing. Initial thought: looks like a Vostok mod, especially the case design.
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That’s pretty cool and thanks for sharing, although I do think they should have gone with the cyclops.
Really cool, would prefer it to be “at least” a 40mm. 43mm is not really a skin diver territory.
They look nice enough, and the connection to the film is cool, but the price is OTT for an NH35 powered microbrand offering.
I like it but I suspect it's a little chunky in the height department, which is the one dimension omitted on the sales web site.
Pinned links too. :(
Looks good. Always fancied an original one but hard to find.
I first saw this a few weeks ago and I really like the retro design, especially on the rubber strap. The bracelet is awful. The price is crazy though. I have two Steeldive watches (and have sold another two) with the same movement and excellent materials and finishing for sub £200.
Hacking, hand-winding automatic with date complication. Lowish beat compared to a 2824-2 but it's not at all clear to me that you are really getting something demonstrably superior in the ubiquitous, boggo ETA movement. As to value, well the rest of the watch looks very well executed. Take a look at the finishing of the hands for example. How much does the movement cost contribute, say, to the RRP of an ETA Tudor Blackbay?
I would also note that the MkII ready-to-wear stuff costs between $600 and $900, all of which fitted with Seiko NH variations, and you have to add shipping and VAT/admin fees on to those prices. £700 landed in the UK for the Alsta looks ok by comparison (and you don't have to content with all of the usual MkII angst). Having said all that, it's still too rich for me but if Ryan buys one and then flips it for a couple of hundred off, then I might be tempted!
Martin
It's billed as 'the long awaited Jaws watch'...was anyone really waiting for such a thing...does seem you're paying 300 plus gbp extra for an almost entirely 'confected' old film tie in. I read the book, admittedly quite a while ago, but I don't think the characters watch even got a mention, might be wrong.
That pales by comparison to folk paying massively over the odds for an unremarkable chronograph just because it happened to be worn by Paul Newman. Or the current Black Bay gravy train for Tudor, built on the back of the iconography Sean Connery's 6538 in Dr. No. The watch industry routinely exploits these associations and plenty of people buy into it. And why not? It's all part of the fun.
Martin
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Fair points, just struck me as an especially 'flimsy' example of its kind due to how long ago Jaws came out and the 'watch' having no role in the source material, at least that I could recall. Also the Shark was the real star and I don't think he actually wore a watch.
The Aston Martin DB5 didn't feature in the Goldfinger book either and Bond generally drove pre-war Bentleys in the other books. Yet we all routinely associate Aston Martin with Bond. The Seiko 6105 is held in such high esteem because Martin Sheen wore it in Apocalypse Now. I can say with confidence that the 6105 did not get a mention in Conrad's Heart of Darkness!! With respect to Hooper's watch in Jaws, there has been very long-standing speculation about the identity of that watch and I suspect plenty of folk interested in this new release as a result of the identity of original having been revealed.
Martin
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Yes, that's the crux of it. Notwithstanding Martin's defence of the movement it's still regarded within the industry as entry level and suitable for sub-£500 watches. Any interest in Hooper's watch in the film is certainly limited to die-hard Jaws fans so when all's said and done I think we can agree that the watch is somewhat overpriced with a tenuous connection to an old movie.
Still, hardly a unique scenario.
I don't disagree it's expensive, but most watches are over-priced, some massively more so than others. I wouldn't place this one in the 'massively over-priced' category - just sufficiently over-priced that I am not interested in buying it! But as I said earlier, there is more to watch pricing than the cost of the movement.
e.g. The Rolex 6538
I am no fan of any of the 7S-derived Seiko movements. Soul-less machine-built movements with no aesthetic appeal. But they are robust, last for years, are reliable and can be regulated to run very accurately. Some of that is also true of the ETA 2824-2. As vanilla a watch movement as you could possibly hope for. A white goods off-the-shelf "Swiss movement" routinely used to add a sufficient degree of Swiss cache to justify asking unreasonable amounts of money for otherwise unremarkable middle-of-the-road horological output.
Martin
Certainly a mainstay. We can get an idea of where we would be by looking to see what small manufacturers are fitting to their watches now that ETA has stopped supply: the answer is Sellita, Soprod, Seiko, Miyota (and yes, I know that the first two by and large produce ETA clones but whatever vacuum is created will be filled and we will get on with it).
Martin
Yes, voids will be filled indeed, but at a higher cost or a lesser quality than the 2824.
R&D requires a huge outlay that is now not applicable since the IP run out and hence sellita and Soprod can offer the clones at such prices. Imagine what would happen if they had to develop a movement from the ground up...
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Last edited by Ar.parask; 22nd May 2020 at 18:44.
Regardless of whether or not the bog-standard ETA2824 and it's clones are any better, or more desirable than the bog-standard NH35/4R35, the fact remains, you can get them much cheaper. And you can get watches with them in much cheaper. I just bought an NH35 powered, titanium cased, well built field watch with 200m of water resistance and great lume delivered from Hong Kong by way of the Netherlands for £250. Which makes the £800 for one of these feel like a lot to pay for the tenuous film connection.
But I understand that this is really the wrong hobby to be overly concerned about perceived value.
So cool
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Really like the look of this, and the film tie in is cool but it would need to be <£500 for me personally to consider it
38mm is great, but beyond that, I'd rather buy a Vostok and have a whole lot of cash left in my pocket.
I’m the biggest Jaws fan going. Literally jaws memorabilia all over my house, and two Jaws tattoos, but this is still far too much money, and far too tenuous a link to the film for me to consider purchasing. £350 and I’d consider it...maybe.
I was put off by the decision to fit their earlier models with mineral crystals, as much as I liked the designs. It would be acceptable in a a Seiko SKX but not a watch costing nearly £700.
Dave
You've done it now!!!
I need to see the 2 jaws tattoos
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Ha! Will attempt to post shortly. My images have a horrendous photobucket watermark on, any way to get around that? Or I can PM to someone?
I’m certainly not shy about showing them. They’re both on my left leg, and it’s always a good excuse to drop trousers in a pub!
Hi guys, I've been lurking and decided to register so I could share my take on this watch, as I own one.
Disclaimer: Jaws is my favorite movie. That being said, I was drawn to the watch before it was even identified, as I thought it was a very cool & unique looking 70's diver.
The case is impressive and very well finished. Excluding the movement, they are Swiss made, and it shows. The bezel is 120 click, very precise, albeit a bit stiff. Zero wobble or back-play.
Very nice boxed sapphire crystal and excellent lume on the dial & hands. I'm glad they excluded the cyclops over the date. I think it would look strange on such a highly domed crystal.
It seems as though they took the time to regulate the NH35. Mine is running a consistent + 2 seconds per day. I don't have any issues with the movement choice. It hacks, hand winds, keeps accurate time, and would be very affordable to have serviced or replaced some day.
I see why some people would dislike the bracelet, but for me, it's one of my favorite styles. I have two other watches with rally style bracelets. The bracelet on the movie watch was a Speidel Mach 1 twist-o-flex expansion. Very inappropriate for anything beyond lightweight watches. If you wear one on a diver, it will flop around and drive you crazy when you move your arm around. I think they did a great job of creating a bracelet that looks nearly identical, yet is a link bracelet. It's solid and well thought out. The clasp is not milled, which would have been nice, but it makes for a lower profile clasp when closed.
Some sellers are offering them for around $800 USD. I get the people that think it should have an ETA movement even at that price, but the overall quality of the watch is excellent.
For me, the watch is a definite keeper. And it's a serious diver... "I'm not talking about day sailing or pleasure boating, I'm talking about working for a living, I'm talking about sharking."
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Whoa! Those are some tattoos!
Have to agree! Fantastic first post Roverguy, and always nice to “meet” someone else who appreciates Jaws