hello, ive been offered a titanium breitling emergency for £450 pounds
its definatly genuine, but the watch doesnt tick and the lcd display isnt on, i asked him why he was willing to let it go so cheap and he told me the battery is flat and it costs quite a bit to replace it
there are no papers or the case with the watch
after doing some research it does seem that the story about the battery being replaced is true as after the first free one with the warrenty the battery replacements cost a lot of money.
so i was just wondering what is involved in the battery changing process to make it cost so much, is it something complex, why cant i do it myself rather than pay breitling $600?
is it something to do with the inbuilt destress signal? are the batteries a rare expensive type exclusive to breitling?
cos to me it just looks like 4 simple scews to have the case of and then pop a normal battery in there.
breitling emergency
Started by
lurch
, Jun 05 2015 05:44 PM
8 replies to this topic
#5
Posted 05 June 2015 - 05:44 PM
Hi Lurch,
Welcome to TRF. Want some good advice? Don't touch that watch with a barge pole. No matter how cheap you find it now, it's going to be a white elephant for you as time goes by.
Changing the battery each time is going to cost you a bomb. I don't think you can do it yourself because it also involves waterproofing, etc. This will turn out to be a very expensive proposition. Eventually, you will get fed up and try to sell it. Yeah right...like trying to sell a fridge to an Eskimo!!
Stick with automatics only. If you want a quartz, buy a cheap watch. Seriously!!
Welcome to TRF. Want some good advice? Don't touch that watch with a barge pole. No matter how cheap you find it now, it's going to be a white elephant for you as time goes by.
Changing the battery each time is going to cost you a bomb. I don't think you can do it yourself because it also involves waterproofing, etc. This will turn out to be a very expensive proposition. Eventually, you will get fed up and try to sell it. Yeah right...like trying to sell a fridge to an Eskimo!!
Stick with automatics only. If you want a quartz, buy a cheap watch. Seriously!!
#6
Posted 05 June 2015 - 05:44 PM
Hi lurch, welcome to this forum.
JJ is actually right on this one. Don't buy this watch because of the reasons he states and the fact that the guy in this photo can afford to throw it away if it stops working!
Mr. Pitt also wears Rolex watches, but I think he keeps those.
If you are really after an electric watch, look for an Omega X33. It's the best around. Ask NASA.
Steve
JJ is actually right on this one. Don't buy this watch because of the reasons he states and the fact that the guy in this photo can afford to throw it away if it stops working!
Mr. Pitt also wears Rolex watches, but I think he keeps those.
If you are really after an electric watch, look for an Omega X33. It's the best around. Ask NASA.
Steve
#7
Posted 05 June 2015 - 05:44 PM
well i thought if i get it working i'll have a watch worth around £1500 even without the box and papers
so i can always get it changed once, wear it for a little while and then sell it, i agree with you though, i prefer automatics to quartz....actually i prefer sieko kinetic movements to automatics and i wish the more prestigious watch makers wold adopt this technology, my sieko that only cost me about £250 brand new is the one i wear the most
#8
Posted 05 June 2015 - 05:44 PM
also being a weekend soldier in the territorial army my walter mitty streak would love a watch with an inbuilt destress signal, though im not sure how lost i could get in a landrover on salisbury plains
and the titanium case is a bit too bling to be tactical, at least id think i'd look cool when all my mates are laughing at me
im just worried breitling wont change the battery for me without documentation and id be left with a useless lump of precious metal, i'll let you know what i decide
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users











