There are many other similar style watches made by Longines, Sinn, Damasko, Ball, and Aegir (to name a few) and many of these actually do have tech that stands out. Heck, the Eterna military 1939 is a great watch to compare (similar style and movement) and it is several hundred less than yours at MSRP. One thing you fail to mention is that the brands mentioned offer discounts thru their ADs. It's not unheard of to get a Tudor Ranger sub $2500 from a retailer. By controlling your sales online, the difference in street price between some of the watches you reference is probably within a few hundred dollars.shane0mack wrote:Sure thing. At $2,150, we're about $1,500 less than the North Flag's retail, so I'm not sure the North Flag is a great comparison. That's about 70% more. Of course, you could forego the Tudor warranty and get it at Joma, but that's not for everyone. Even still, it's more costly. I won't get too much into looks, but I'm not a fan of the North Flag, or integrated bracelets in general (except for some Genta designs).
Compared to the Ranger, the SW300 (a clone of an ETA2892), is arguably a superior movement to the 2824. The Ranger retails at $2,900 on a strap, so again, a good chunk more expensive.
As for a pre-owned Aqua Terra, sure, you can find one for high-$2k range, maybe mid-$2k if you really search. However, they may be out of warranty, they may need service, they may be banged up, etc. Comparing new to pre-owned can be done with watches at any price level, and it opens up a different discussion.
I'm not on a mission to disagree with everything you type, but I think there should be better transparency and less smoke/mirrors in the advertising. I agree that comparing used to new is rather silly.
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