Results 1 to 10 of 1631
Hybrid View
-
04-01-2016, 10:56 PM #1
I'm familiar with Ball. They were at one time headquartered in the US but now Switzerland. They mostly use ETA movements for their watches. Some are in house modified before assembly. ETA (now wholly owned by Swatch) makes some very nice movements depending on the grade. Came close to buying a Ball at one time. My current favorite is the Trainmaster Roman with white dial and blue hands. Very nice. ETA movement and the tubes are very small.
Keep your concentration high and your angles low!
Despite the high cost of living, it's still very popular.
-
04-01-2016, 11:17 PM #2
Ball didn't know squat about watches and they never manufactured anything. He ran a pocketwatch regulation and time service back in the early 20th century and late 19th which serviced the railroad industry. He sold watches which were made by other outfits like Waltham and Hamilton and Elgin and some others with his name on them. In the 1950s his wristwatches were made in Switzerland and the company went defunct then anyway.
The current ball name has no relationship with the original ball Brand other than they bought the name and when you do that you buy the history too.No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
-
04-01-2016, 11:24 PM #3
I never wear a watch anymore as my cell phone has a more accurate clock.
My son is a Drill Instructor in the United States Marine Corps at Parris Island, SC
Mike
-
04-01-2016, 11:30 PM #4
-
04-01-2016, 11:41 PM #5
-
04-02-2016, 03:58 AM #6
-
04-02-2016, 05:55 AM #7
Your right about the Seiko's high end watches. The Grand Seiko is a fantastic watch. I love the SBGA011 Snowflake. For those interested here's a little history about the Grand Seiko.
They're hand made and the vintage ones wiped the floor with the major Swiss brands for accuracy before the COSC was formed in 1973. Before then there was the Astronomical Observatory Authorisation Chronometer Standard (+/- 2/3 seconds/day) competitions. This is to a much higher standard. During the entire 23+ years of testing, 5093 wristwatches were submitted for certification. Only 3253 passed (about 64%). Today around 94% pass the COSC test first time.
Just a few manufacturers participated in the observatory testing. Omega and Patek did so every year. Other participants were Rolex, Zenith, Longines, Movado, Vacheron & Constantin, Girard-Perregaux, Ulysse Nardin, Cyma and Favre-Leuba as well as numerous independent professional watchmakers. Then the Grand Seiko appeared. It's movement outperformed all of the Swiss movements at the time. Only 2 brands submitted their standard production movements built for retail sales (Seiko and Girard-Perregaux). All the others built specially made movements just for the competition. In the mid 60's out of all the watches submitted only the Grand Seiko and the GP passed the test and by the late sixties they were the only 2 companies allowed to sell their watches with this designation. The Seiko was still a production line movement but the GP was now a specially built movement. The competition was ended by the Swiss in the early 1970s after two straight wins by Grand Seiko. Some Swiss watch manufacturers demanded the end of the observatory competitions. In 1973 the current Swiss COSC was founded. Run by the Swiss for the Swiss brands only.
I'm a little confused by your comments. I was giving a little info on the current status of Ball Watches not their history. It wasn't meant to be a pro or con assessment of their company. Just some simple facts of today. Regardless of your feelings about them they do make some credible watches using well designed ETA movements. I'm not a big fan of their styling other than the one I mentioned. YMMV.
Keep your concentration high and your angles low!
Despite the high cost of living, it's still very popular.
-
04-02-2016, 06:09 AM #8
Speaking of Seiko's - I've got a Seiko Ventura, nice big watch, Quartz Movement with an automatic type function that charges the battery for up to a month, OK watch. One of those Citizen radio controlled watches that charges via sunlight, a nice old Tag Automatic Chronograph...and speaking of Seiko's - this is one of my favorites, a very old Seiko 7T59, still have everything original (still have original box, papers, links), always treated it very well and is regularly serviced, still keeps exact time comparing it against the atomic clock:
-
04-02-2016, 06:42 AM #9
I've always been a Seiko Fan. I used to have a big collection of vintage Seiko pieces and limited editions but I sold them all some time ago. I still have a Quartz piece my wife bought me back in 1977 or so. it still runs like a champ. I also have a new LE edition with urushi dial work and a new Astron which is quartz based and keeps time with GPS Satellites. I've had a few Spring Drives and a couple Grand Seiko's too.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
-
04-02-2016, 07:02 PM #10