It's a great reference, very well suited to daily wear with its sapphire crystal. Plus, the later series had solid oyster links, which are far more sturdy than the folded ones.
11:30, What do you think of Omega Seamaster 300 Bronze Gold? The case of the watch is enriched with elements such as 37.5% gold (9K), as well as palladium and silver, to create a unique colour of bronze. I love the classy look and I don't think it suffers from the same problems as a real bronze watch.
Pondering on what you said earlier Uptick. Seeing students and waiters wearing a watch that you want to buy, could be the ultimate test of whether you like the watch or are you buying into the hype. For example, seeing a Hulk on a student, Aquanaut on a junior HR lady, or a Daytona on a Doorman turns off the appeal of the watch for me. However, seeing something like a Milgauss Z-Blue, a Speedmaster 321, or a Reverso on the wrist of an intern would make me want to walk over and pay compliment to him/her.
On both the 94010 and 79090 Tudor's, the blue of the bezel has faded. The original color would have been very close to that of the current Black Bay 58 Blue. And yes, the bezel is a bidirectional friction one, like on the Rolex 5513 / 5512 / 1680 / 1665.
@@johnnyguitar6697 beautiful pieces, thank you for sharing! TBH, I've always been more of a Tudor fan than Rolex, to make an American analogy, I drive Chevrolet's, Tudor is the Chevrolet to Rolex's Cadillac.. 😉
How refreshing, Johnny's a genuine watch collector through & through. Excellent collection of videos, much appreciated.
Smart , fun , collector . Great video .
Tudor 79190 one of my favorites!
It's a great reference, very well suited to daily wear with its sapphire crystal. Plus, the later series had solid oyster links, which are far more sturdy than the folded ones.
Thanks guys, interesting content, great stamina!
11:30, What do you think of Omega Seamaster 300 Bronze Gold?
The case of the watch is enriched with elements such as 37.5% gold (9K), as well as palladium and silver, to create a unique colour of bronze. I love the classy look and I don't think it suffers from the same problems as a real bronze watch.
Pondering on what you said earlier Uptick. Seeing students and waiters wearing a watch that you want to buy, could be the ultimate test of whether you like the watch or are you buying into the hype.
For example, seeing a Hulk on a student, Aquanaut on a junior HR lady, or a Daytona on a Doorman turns off the appeal of the watch for me.
However, seeing something like a Milgauss Z-Blue, a Speedmaster 321, or a Reverso on the wrist of an intern would make me want to walk over and pay compliment to him/her.
There are many people wearing fakes.
Hi, is the steel of the blue bay 58 different to the black version? Other UA-cam videos suggest they are different. Thanks!
Hi, I mention it in a previous video. All credits to Adrian for spotting it.
Is the bezel faded or blue ? Beautiful Tudors! Are the bezels bi-directional on those?
On both the 94010 and 79090 Tudor's, the blue of the bezel has faded. The original color would have been very close to that of the current Black Bay 58 Blue. And yes, the bezel is a bidirectional friction one, like on the Rolex 5513 / 5512 / 1680 / 1665.
@@johnnyguitar6697 beautiful pieces, thank you for sharing! TBH, I've always been more of a Tudor fan than Rolex, to make an American analogy, I drive Chevrolet's, Tudor is the Chevrolet to Rolex's Cadillac.. 😉
@@ChrisAlvarezAlvarezImaging Nothing wrong at all with Chevrolet. I wish I had a Bel Air or an Impala...