In a post from a few days ago, I noticed that someone mentioned that they were afraid to post about their dislike of the Tudor BB58 for fear of downvoting. You know what? The BB is a boring watch that’s not worth the money, and Tudor wouldn’t be half as popular as it is without the connection to Rolex. If Rolexes were as attainable as they were in past years, cut that by a factor of 10. Would you really buy a BB if the reality were that you could just save a little bit more and get a Rolex Submariner? That’s my hot take. What’s yours?
Mechanical tool watches are an oxymoron. A G shock will outperform any 25k watch.
True, I don’t get why they’re called tool watches anymore (some, ever). They’re luxury items with a sporty design and that’s fine, but taking a picture chopping wood with your TT GMT because it’s “meant to be worn” feels desperate for group acceptance
100%-- I want a Sinn-level build quality chronograph with a quartz movement
Speedmaster x-33 is the way forward
Yay for functionality, but nay for form-factor or design language IMO-- I would love it if I could afford it as a 5th watch or sth, but for example the entire sinn or seiko prospect line should be HAQ if they want to be tool watches.
My hot take is that people with this hot take are just looking for things to complain about. It’s just a way to label a style of watch. It’s like saying “calling a chronometer a chronometer is dumb because all watches measure time and that’s what chronometer means.”
A dive computer will outperform any dive watch, so should we just stop using the term dive watch? No because it’s a useful way to categorise the style of watch that every understands
I’m not complaining, I just think it’s a little silly to talk about the practicality of watches that are inherently inpractical. The labeling isn’t what I’m talking about. It’s about how some people talk about the watches. Liking submariners or speedmasters or something because one appreciates their beauty, craftsmanship, history, etc is one thing, but talking up their performance specs is another. Here’s an example of what I’m talking about
A G Shock will do every one of those functionalities singfiicantly better so it’s just funny to me to have that be the sort of sales pitch.
I agree wholeheartedly, though I raise you Rado. Another contentious take on this sub…
I think the term “tool watch” is more historical than describing present day use case
True, but often people market and discuss them as if they are meant to be tools. A lot of people care a lot about specs and performance and certification in regards to precision, water resistance, etc