Ole Faithful
April 21st, 2006

I don’t want to start watch talks with old dead topics, but here are the facts, routinely customers ask, “How can watch company X and watch company Y use the same movement and charge such different prices?” The ETA 2892 is the best place to start. This movement has been used by so many high-end watch brands that I won’t even attempt to list them. Pick one, you are probably right! What we need to distinguish in the watch business is time on the job. Base movements are just that, base movements. Check out this article: “The Little Engine That Could” An indepth look at the ETA 2892. It demonstrates just some of the modifications that can go into this ETA 2892 movement alone. This is where we start to get a sense for what the skilled people in Switzerland and Germany are doing. To be a collector of fine watches is to know movements, who made them, and more importantly what has been done to make them just a touch better than the competition. Many people have the recipe for bread, but I bet you like grandma’s best, why? The love my friends, the love. CTWG
Entry Filed under: Watches, Mechanical


2 Comments Add your own
1. Anthony | April 21st, 2006 at 11:59 pm
Wow! Great, informative read! I’m relatively new to the watch brigade, this was a great education in the basics. Thanks CTWG!
2. Adam Brown | May 15th, 2006 at 4:48 pm
Chad, great link and explanation of the levels of customization that watch manufacturers will put into a movement.
I always like to say that it’s a bit like a NASCAR engine - which is in theory the same engine blok that you can get in a car down at the Chevy dealership with just a few hundred thousand dollars of “customization.”
-aB
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