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Product Description
Seiko has a knack for creating quality automatic timepieces. Here, we're offering two different models, both with a 24-hour subdial at 10 o'clock and a date window between 4 and 5 Read More
I ordered watch, on screen there was SSA231, in order there is silver one, which one I will get ? I send info about order taht I wanted SSA231 but no one answered ...
1rooz1You're getting the SSA231, there is no other option in the page.
The leather band is an instant no-go from me.
Cruelty free or no cash for you, Drop.
I'll preface this by saying, the watch I own is a Seiko 5. a really attractive automatic watch, always gets compliments, keeps pretty good time.
then after a couple of years I needed to have it cleaned and adjusted. the price tag for the repair was... a little more than what I paid for the watch.
I may be wrong, but I'm not sure this is endemic to Seiko 5s, I've been told by an engineer the cost of periodic maintenance for many automatic watches is as much as more as the typically discounted purchase price. so until I hear different, I'm buying battery timepieces.
@Glen8@DsS123@truiz would never have brought it in, except it was in dire need of regulation, running 45+ minutes/day fast. no one would regulate it without cleaning it as well.
scubalabMore than a little misleading.
Cruelty-free or no cash, Drop. Sell more good watches without leather.
Prettier than this one would be great, too.
Tempting, but I'm saving my pennies for a grand seiko snowflake now.
Seiko stuff always tempts me, my little old five is just something I come back to again and again.
LunchableBecause they know people who are unwilling to spend more than $200 are equally unwilling to dive more than 300 feet below the surface of their swimming pools--if that.
@truiz go to Crystal Times. Should be around $50 depending on model. Add $15 for a crystal press and another $5-$10 for caseback opener. Pretty easy to do, you just have to k ow where to push to release the crown to get the movement out of the case. Watch out for dust.
OldFinnI've been a little careless with my Seiko, wearing it to work on days involving roof repair. I was climbing a ladder and smacked it against a plastic end cap, and after having read about people scratching their hardlex just by looking at it wrong, I half expected to see a bad gouge on mine. Still pristine; only minor scratches on the bezel.
Maybe Seiko just tempers their crystals with inconsistent results.