I know its been discussed many times but its so frustrating with the waiting lists. The date sub was £7300 when I registered my interest, its now £8650.
I know its been discussed many times but its so frustrating with the waiting lists. The date sub was £7300 when I registered my interest, its now £8650.
could not find price list?i am useless at tech though , not that it matters, but i would still buy a SS skydweller tomorrow at retail IF i could
While Rolex UK usually send an Excel spreadsheet to main agents with all the new prices, the website simply shows the new price with each individual model.
You may thus Google "Rolex.com 326934 blue" and find this : https://www.rolex.com/watches/sky-dw...6934-0003.html
H
I have spent 10 mins trying to locate the SD43 but I cannot find it. There is an 18k/SS version only, unless I am blind?
Blind !
https://www.rolex.com/watches/sea-dw...6600-0002.html
£11,150
An interesting graphic on the increase:
https://datastudio.google.com/report...051/page/frfiC
Already covered here - prices went up on 1st Jan.
https://forum.tz-uk.com/showthread.php?520126
A bit academic really when you can't actually buy most of them.....
Got my Exp II back in June - can't believe there have been 2 price rises since. almost 10% increase. Wonder if this pace of increases is normal, or just keeping with with cost of living trends.
Inflation in Switzerland is certainly much lower than rest of world.
Strange that the percentage increases vary so much from watch to watch
Rolex business strategy is pricing their watches on a par with AP/PP/VC for the wealthiest, while the Tudor brand is pitched at middle class professionals
They've not tried to hide this; they don't want Rolex to be seen on the wrists of middle-managers, architects, day-traders and Swiss Toni etc
Last edited by J J Carter; 3rd January 2023 at 18:52.
So hard to buy a sports Rolex yet the YT I watched a day or so ago said Rolex account for 23% of the whole Swiss watch industry, Omega only 6%, yet you can virtually walk into an Omega boutique and get what you want within a reasonable time period. If not straight away, 6 year wait for a Rolex, if at all, or have I got that wrong!
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It seems to me that Tudor are now what Rolex once was: expensive but affordable (and available) well-made, simple, stylish tool watches. I like them. Rolex, sadly, are are increasingly veblen bling bracelets.
The problem with this is that in the 1950s and '60s people (men, mainly) needed robust, accurate and legible timepieces, ideally automatic, waterproof and, if possible, chronometer-rated. Rolex were the gold standard with Omega a close second. These days they (we) don't: you can wear some smartwatch piece of tech that tell you more than just the time in another place (GMT hand) or gives you a chronograph / stopwatch function (hello, Speedmaster / Daytona). You could even -- heaven forfend! -- wear a simple quartz three-hander (date optional) which will cost you less than a fiver and will be accurate, cheap and waterproof enough for the pool or a scuba dive. What would NASA or Sir Edmund Hillary wear today? Maybe G-Shock?
So let Rolex charge what they want. No one needs one or any other mechanical watch. They are all luxury goods, status symbols, flashy toys.
Whinge on, my good fellows, but you'll either pay or not. And besides, there's a semiological argument that says even a real Rolex is a fake anyway. Just the other day I saw a large funeral party -- white working class, a family-owned builders / groundworks / roofers maybe with some Irish / traveller blood in their veins -- all decked out in Rolexes. Or "Rolexes". Real? Fake? I don't know or care. Good luck to them sez I. But if you want or wear a Rolex then that is that kind of portable / visible wealth that you are buying. I'm not being a snob -- in fact I'm assuming their watches were real -- but that's not really my scene, not really my style. My money, such as it is, ain't on my wrists or even in my car -- a 2002 Honda Civic with 150,000 miles on the clock which almost doubles in value after I fill the tank, but, as they say, your mileage may vary. Each to their own and God bless us every one.
I’ve cancelled a recent ‘expression of interest’ in a Rolex. I can’t be arsed any more. Too much bling and hype.
Ordered a Garrick instead which actually cost more than the Rolex but much less poserish.
Omega, Rolex, IWC, GO etc will soon all be out of the price of most people. It’s a shame as they moving away from being aspirational to unobtainable.
Obviously other brands are filling that void but many won’t be interested in them. It is what it is.
You seem to forget that many of us have a significant interest in, and passion for, horology. After all, this is a watch forum (despite the trials and tribulations contained herein). Yes, you can buy a watch for less than a fiver. But that's not the point and I think you know that. The reasons for collecting watches are many and varied. For me, it isn't about money or investment. It is more about an appreciation of fine engineering, craftsmanship and artistic expression. It is obviously not just about telling the time!
Gold standard?
I'm not sure what to make of these sort of Rolex Fan Boy outbursts. Rolex didn't even make their millionth watch until the early fifties. They were not even Jonathan to Omega's Goliath.
What's the best watch with fine engineering, craftsmanship and artistic expression you have bought for a fiver?
Edit. I confess I expected to be able to dig something out of the dregs of ebay that would give me the basis of arguing that it was all those things, but clearly the bottom of the barrel is slightly pricier these days. Perhaps ten or twenty quid to be able to get something that you can make a case for being as interesting as a current Rolex.
Last edited by M4tt; 3rd January 2023 at 21:42.
Is there much haute (or even interesting) horology in your average Rolex? As for "fine engineering, craftsmanship and artistic expression" I'd say that brands such as Nomos or JLC give much bigger bang for the buck.
They didn't even really make watches then, not as a fully in-house manufacture, but bought in the movements and slapped their name on the plates, bridges and rotors.
As the Everest thread shows, Rolex -- good watches though they were and still are -- have always been best at PR.