I'm a machinist by trade and a hobbyist watchmaker. The tools and "machines" here are truly amazing. Pocket watches in most instances were the most expensive and technologically advanced devices a person could own. They could cost nearly a years wages. They were cared for and repaired when necessary because accurate time keeping was so important to daily life. This is why one can, with relative ease, acquire a fully functional pocket watch that is over 200 years old. Getting to see these tools makes me appreciate my hobby even more. I'm very grateful to Andre for his passion and hard work invested in these historic machines and tools. Thank you for sharing this with us.
Incredible! Thankfully, there are people that care about the past as much as the present. These tools being restored and there for all the world to see is wonderful! Thank you for this video!
Thank You Andre for taking the time to save these machines , seeing the workmanship that goes into designing and making of these machines which are not only functional but beautiful is humbling. Thank you Peter for the explanations and the presentation and most of all Mads..you have done it again...a brilliant edition that looks at another aspect of the world of watches...
What a gift to the world demonstrating the history of an era of amazing tool and watchmaking masters. Such and outstanding presentation and we are all indebted to the work of Andre.
This is breath taking !!! I wish in the near future , Mr Speake Marin will use these babies to produce timepieces again !! that would be like the cherry on top , in watchmaking !!
I really appreciate your cooperation with Mr. Speak-Marin. His project "Naked Watchmaker" already fascinates me, and your videos with him are the audiovisual icing on the cake with the usual great production value!
A bundle of thanks to everyone involved in making this video, and Mr André Léchot specifically for having such an amazing collection and restoring it all by himself. Collections like these deserve to be preserved and made available for future generations, along with helpful videos like this, to showcase the human ingenuity, passion and brilliant craftsmanship. It is more pertinent now, when our attention spans are decreasing and main sources of human attention are getting restricted to rather silly and uninvolved avenues.
Marc, this video demonstrates that you really know your core audience. Utterly fascinating, I wish it was twice as long with close ups and demonstrations!
Really a great video. Congratulations to M. Léchot for his incredible collection and to Mr. Speake-Marin for the passionate and clear explanation. Thank you theWatchesTV for the nth excellent proposal. Keep on this way.
C'est incroyable cette collection. Certainement il a fallu des années pour la constituer et comment aller jetter certains de ces outillages ! Bravo pour les avoir récupéré c'est digne d'un musée. 🤩😍
Go back for 4 hours and I'd pay for that on DVD. This was wonderful, my dream exactly if I won the lottery. I knew what every one of these tools were and how they were used- except for 1- the balance clamping rest for removing balance screws. Even the bow mill I knew. He picked the most common tools that many know...I would love to see him go through the whole collection for 4 hours 🥰 Thank you so much for making this, it brought me such joy to know someone else cared about these as much as me. Is his collection viewable by appointment?
Wow, one of the best videos so far. Just one minus, it was too short. I would have liked it to be longer, much longer. Are you gonna make a second video covering more tools in more depth ? That would be awesome. As I'm new to the watch repair, I like the old tools and the work they could do. Modern machines are great, but they miss on the personal level of care when it comes to making a watch. Thank you for another great video.
The matchless ingenuity of the Western World and in particular the engineering achievements of European watchmakers and machinists never cease to amaze me. I am very delighted by this video!
Marc, Peter & Andre, thank you all for this wonderful "look back in time". As mentioned by other posters if it was longer I would still be watching. It is so fantastic to see the tools restored, and working, and have Peter explain what they were used for. Fascinating stuff!
Traditional watchmaking is in so many ways more interesting than the end product it self. Most of these tools were designed and executed with amazing care and craftsmanship to serve a single purpose. I heard about this collection a few months ago. It is a private exhibition but Peter can arrange public showings on a very small scale. I'd rather see this than the patek museum. Someone should do a beautiful coffee table size book on these with a short synopsis about them. Thank you for sharing this. I would love to see a part 2, part 3 or more. Viva watchmaking!
Thank you for this marvelous video! It is more than amazing the amount of craftsmanship and passion that were invested in these incredible pieces of handcrafted masterpieces. The fact remains that Swiss and German artisans are the best in the world in fine machinery design, creation, and maintenance. No other people can come close to their precision and workmanship in what I often term "The Culture of Quality". These are crafts passed down from father to son that can never be duplicated elsewhere.
Steffen Pahlow, a retired watchmaker from Bad Nauheim in Germany, has a good collection himself and he uses them all the time. He both restores antique timepieces and makes new ones.
Beautifull. This is the reason I work as a toolmaker, this appreciation, and value that I have admired in past generation machinery. Buil for a specification not for a price. Unfortunately, most companies are now driven by accountants and they have little care about engineering finesse. All they see is profit margins and now pride in quality.
Marc and Peter: Having just got in watch repairing after retiring for work. The tools used in watch making are fascinating, and this collection is beautiful. Thank you Peter for explaining the use of some of the tools. Thanks to the collector for sharing his passion and to you Marc for another great video. Keep up the excellent work you do on TheWatchesTV.
I build tools like this for a company that produces medical products. The mechanisms seem to inspire the people who use them. The end result is everyone is rewarded. I encourage all engineers to design and build in this manner. Clever and artistic.
I would have loved to see more of this collection. Oddly I found this video whilst searching for instructions on a Vintage watch tool I just purchased. I restore vintage watches and get vintage tools as part of lot purchases. Amazing video thanks you.
Wowowowowowo what a stunning video….. thank you to you and to Peter to explain to us the working behind this lovely machine.. we need to visit this place pleeeease i would really love to go and visit him….. pleeeaseeeeee thank you very much ! All the best
What a fantastic collection! In must have been an amazing amount of time to restore all this beautiful machines to this condition. On some of them I am working nearly every day, and dispite the fact that some of them are over hundred years old, their accuracy is still absolutley top. Many people who visit my workshop are thinking that I just collect them because they are beautiful to look at, but they are still great to work with!
Oh my goodness, what a wonderful lifetime of restoration Andra LeShone (sorry about your name spelling sir) you are a very passionate man, you have spent these 40 years doing a job that is priceless. We are in the Untied States and while we have been at this for 15 years to your 40 years we are proud to be made aware of you. Thanks to the expert standing with you Peter who explains these tools well and to TheWatches.tv crew for finding you. While we have many of these machines and tools like you, we just want to share that we to this day utilize many of them daily as well as we restore them along the way add new ones too often (addiction we think). Anyways Mr. LeShone (sorry again for the spelling) we honor your efforts and thank you so much for allowing the outside world in to see your wonderful work and collection.
Thank you so much for this super appreciated comment and very happy to have brought this to your attention. And also truly happy to heat that you do the same!!! All the very best
Thank you for this video. As a watchmaker it was both educational and enlightening. Peter was an excellent guide and as mentioned, these are true antiques that while still functional, don’t really exist in modern watchmaking.
Very educational video and great content as always. The owner really should consider setting up a museum to publicly display and share these amazing pieces.
I'm sure everyone agrees that's why own a nice time piece is so mesmerizing if you appreciate, what is a behind the final product, very interesting video, thanks guys
Ahhh great to see you again Marc Andre! Been away from UA-cam but glad I am back for another extraordinary video from my favourite timepiece connoisseur! Always a pleasure Marc, cheers from Kevin, Louisiana, USA
Absolutely fascinating! I find that last tool with the balance wheel particularly incredible. Next episode: Tools that makes watch making tools. Perhaps?
A fantastic video, thank you Marc.why did Peter only wear one glove? He put his fingerprints all over the brass work! I'm sure the owner was delighted.
What a fantastic collection and video, thanks Peter for your detailed explanations. This collection needs to be preserved for posterity in a public museum, not least as a monument to this man's dedication in preserving these treasures. If ever you are in Waterford go to the new Irish Museum of Time where fantastic private collections of watches and clocks (mainly) are preserved and presented beautifully. How wonderful it would be to actually see these machines in operation. Just a comment on the wheels with fancy serpentine spokes. When wheels are cast it is well known that the spokes often crack as a result of contraction during the cooling process if they are strictly radial---the serpentine shape provides more flexibility and partly at least alleviates the problem. So as well as decorative, the shape may have a very practical function if the wheels were cast. You will find this technique used on cast wheels on even very humble farm machinery.
An exceptional video. I'm not a tech geek per se, but Mr Speake Marin must've felt like a kid in a candy shop ;-) My favorite was the tool for pocket watch bows!
Many thanks for preparing this great program that teaches the history of birth of watchmaking tools, when i wear a watch I give a lot of appreciation much more than just enjoy it, my special thanks to the collector and restorer of those tools " le Monsieu Andre Lechot " merci merci merci bien, je t' apprecie beaucoup. it will be nice if the producer of this program to give him enough time to express himself, he deserve to speak into the microphone even with his french, sadly it wasn't.
Speake-Marin watches blew me away the first time I handled them and saw their price point. For my personal taste, the lugs and crowns were a bit too much for me. But after seeing this, I feel like I understand his brand much better now (albeit that he is no longer at the company) and am definitely re-interested in trying another on...
History porn! Watchmaking porn! Mechanical engineering porn! I don't know what to do with my morning now. I can't imagine the thought process and genius that the watchmakers had to design and implement the execution of the specific tools. It's a thing of wonder and beauty. Top video!
I find myself alternating which wrist I'd wear my watch on depending on which particular style of watch i chose to wear at that time, for example my Casio Pro Trek would be on the left, Tag on the right, just depends on mood and destination i guess.
Phantastic video, Marc. Peter was the first person I met and spoke to when I attended Baselworld for the first time. A joy to watch this...
I'm a machinist by trade and a hobbyist watchmaker. The tools and "machines" here are truly amazing. Pocket watches in most instances were the most expensive and technologically advanced devices a person could own. They could cost nearly a years wages. They were cared for and repaired when necessary because accurate time keeping was so important to daily life. This is why one can, with relative ease, acquire a fully functional pocket watch that is over 200 years old. Getting to see these tools makes me appreciate my hobby even more. I'm very grateful to Andre for his passion and hard work invested in these historic machines and tools. Thank you for sharing this with us.
You're very welcome and I think so too that pocket watches are fantastic objects for what they represent! Best to you
Outstanding! If it was two hours long, I would have watched every minute.
Agreed.
In that case we might have to go back!!!! Best to you
Yes! Please go back!
SAME
@@watchestv-com Please go back with longer version !!!!!!!!!!
Beautiful watchmakertool collection
Incredible collection and Incredibly important collection without those tools none of the watches we collect and enjoy today would exist!.
Incredible! Thankfully, there are people that care about the past as much as the present. These tools being restored and there for all the world to see is wonderful! Thank you for this video!
So happy you liked it, thanks a lot!!
Thank You Andre for taking the time to save these machines , seeing the workmanship that goes into designing and making of these machines which are not only functional but beautiful is humbling. Thank you Peter for the explanations and the presentation and most of all Mads..you have done it again...a brilliant edition that looks at another aspect of the world of watches...
So happy to read this nice comment, thanks so much!!!!
What a gift to the world demonstrating the history of an era of amazing tool and watchmaking masters. Such and outstanding presentation and we are all indebted to the work of Andre.
This is breath taking !!! I wish in the near future , Mr Speake Marin will use these babies to produce timepieces again !! that would be like the cherry on top , in watchmaking !!
I really appreciate your cooperation with Mr. Speak-Marin. His project "Naked Watchmaker" already fascinates me, and your videos with him are the audiovisual icing on the cake with the usual great production value!
That is so nice to hear, thanks so much, makes us truly happy!!!
The creativity and engineering prowess of these early watchmakers are to be respected for their beauty in creating these wonderful tools.
This was a great video. And has added to my appreciation for the craftsmanship from the past. Thank yog
Makes us truly happy, thanks a lot!!
Another awesome video by Marc...
This is the only video online which delicate itself purely on watch making tools. Good job!!!!!!!!
Love showing the broader spectrum of watchmaking!!! Thanks for the comment
A bundle of thanks to everyone involved in making this video, and Mr André Léchot specifically for having such an amazing collection and restoring it all by himself.
Collections like these deserve to be preserved and made available for future generations, along with helpful videos like this, to showcase the human ingenuity, passion and brilliant craftsmanship. It is more pertinent now, when our attention spans are decreasing and main sources of human attention are getting restricted to rather silly and uninvolved avenues.
Such an incredible job restorting these tools! I'm so jealous and want all of them!
He did an astounding job with this; no compromise, no shortcuts taken, everything is mint!!!!! Extraordinary
Marc, this video demonstrates that you really know your core audience. Utterly fascinating, I wish it was twice as long with close ups and demonstrations!
Really a great video. Congratulations to M. Léchot for his incredible collection and to Mr. Speake-Marin for the passionate and clear explanation. Thank you theWatchesTV for the nth excellent proposal. Keep on this way.
That's very nice of you, thanks so much!
Superb watch tools collection review, for our appreciation to commemorate watch making contributions in time keeping history.
Well Done.
Thanks for understanding what we try to do, very appreciated! Best to you
beautiful objects, i know nothing about watchmaking, yet i was fascinated.
Great man to collect and restore such wonderful history.
Thanks for this nice comment!
I appreciate this and you both, thanks for sharing this with us
C'est incroyable cette collection. Certainement il a fallu des années pour la constituer et comment aller jetter certains de ces outillages ! Bravo pour les avoir récupéré c'est digne d'un musée. 🤩😍
I could listen to Peter all day. Pure class. It appears he’s wearing a Stoic Pilot... an entry level brand he’s now involved with.
That's right! Thanks for watching
Go back for 4 hours and I'd pay for that on DVD. This was wonderful, my dream exactly if I won the lottery.
I knew what every one of these tools were and how they were used- except for 1- the balance clamping rest for removing balance screws. Even the bow mill I knew. He picked the most common tools that many know...I would love to see him go through the whole collection for 4 hours 🥰
Thank you so much for making this, it brought me such joy to know someone else cared about these as much as me. Is his collection viewable by appointment?
Fascinating, and who better than the Naked Watch Maker to take us on a tour. Simply brilliant.
Wow, one of the best videos so far. Just one minus, it was too short. I would have liked it to be longer, much longer. Are you gonna make a second video covering more tools in more depth ? That would be awesome. As I'm new to the watch repair, I like the old tools and the work they could do. Modern machines are great, but they miss on the personal level of care when it comes to making a watch. Thank you for another great video.
thank you for this new video, the comments and explanations of Peter are really interesting.
Very welcome and thanks!!
The matchless ingenuity of the Western World and in particular the engineering achievements of European watchmakers and machinists never cease to amaze me. I am very delighted by this video!
This makes me super happy, thanks so much and so glad you liked it!
Thanks for taking the time to make this video
So wonderful to see these old fantastic tools
Marc, Peter & Andre, thank you all for this wonderful "look back in time". As mentioned by other posters if it was longer I would still be watching. It is so fantastic to see the tools restored, and working, and have Peter explain what they were used for. Fascinating stuff!
Many thanks for this, delighted you liked it!! Best to you too
That opening just made my jaw drop. That is quite a collection and I'm pretty much speechless. Impressive stuff!
IC
Get your feeling, had the same one when I entered this incredible room for the first time (and the second time!!!). Best to you
Pretty much beautiful works of art in my humble opinion. Outstanding collection.
OMG do I love this channel. I have watched this video three times in a row. No kidding!
Hahaha, I love it, thanks a lot!!!!!!!
I have a First Original Set of Watch Making Tools from my grandfather. He worked at one of the houses when he was young.
Where are you from?
This was beyond wonderful. Tank you for all of your efforts, watchmaking would not be the same without you.
That is so kind of you, thanks so much, means a lot to us!!!
An astounding collection of historic tools. I would love to see each one demonstrated.
Absolutely stunning collection, thank you so much for this video
👍👍
You are most welcome and thanks for this nice comment!
Traditional watchmaking is in so many ways more interesting than the end product it self. Most of these tools were designed and executed with amazing care and craftsmanship to serve a single purpose. I heard about this collection a few months ago. It is a private exhibition but Peter can arrange public showings on a very small scale. I'd rather see this than the patek museum. Someone should do a beautiful coffee table size book on these with a short synopsis about them. Thank you for sharing this. I would love to see a part 2, part 3 or more. Viva watchmaking!
Thanks so much and we could definitely produce more, there are so many other incredible ones!!!! Best to you
Thank you for this marvelous video!
It is more than amazing the amount of craftsmanship and passion that were invested in these incredible pieces of handcrafted masterpieces.
The fact remains that Swiss and German artisans are the best in the world in fine machinery design, creation, and maintenance.
No other people can come close to their precision and workmanship in what I often term "The Culture of Quality".
These are crafts passed down from father to son that can never be duplicated elsewhere.
I own three simple topping tools, not as beautiful as these but indeed, a work of art in itself.
Steffen Pahlow, a retired watchmaker from Bad Nauheim in Germany, has a good collection himself and he uses them all the time. He both restores antique timepieces and makes new ones.
Thanks for this info, always makes us happy to know that there are people still using such tools, they work great! Best to you
Excellent video and explanation of watchmaking tools of the past.
Beautifull. This is the reason I work as a toolmaker, this appreciation, and value that I have admired in past generation machinery. Buil for a specification not for a price. Unfortunately, most companies are now driven by accountants and they have little care about engineering finesse. All they see is profit margins and now pride in quality.
Amen. No one cares or appreciates craftsmanship or artistry anymore. We are all loosing because of it.
Doing our share to put this forward ;) All the very best to you and thanks for watching.
@@watchestv-com No, thank you Mark for your efforts to film and edit this, is a real treasure and it inspires more than you think.
Marc and Peter: Having just got in watch repairing after retiring for work. The tools used in watch making are fascinating, and this collection is beautiful. Thank you Peter for explaining the use of some of the tools. Thanks to the collector for sharing his passion and to you Marc for another great video. Keep up the excellent work you do on TheWatchesTV.
This really makes us happy, thanks so much, highly appreciated comment! Best to you
I see so many tools I wish I had in my workshop. I love that they're restored and preserved I also wish I could put them to use.
Superbe mécanique, merci pour cette vidéo.
De rien et merci de regarder nos vidéos!!
I am lost for words, so beautiful.
Quite something for sure 👍👍👍 thanks for the comment
I build tools like this for a company that produces medical products. The mechanisms seem to inspire the people who use them. The end result is everyone is rewarded. I encourage all engineers to design and build in this manner. Clever and artistic.
Indeed a nice combination!
I'm hoping these machines make it to an horological museum eventually. A treasure for sure. ✌
One word. UNBELIEVABLE!
I would have loved to see more of this collection. Oddly I found this video whilst searching for instructions on a Vintage watch tool I just purchased. I restore vintage watches and get vintage tools as part of lot purchases. Amazing video thanks you.
André did a great job. His collection is unique.
Absolutely, fantastic job!!!
Wowowowowowo what a stunning video….. thank you to you and to Peter to explain to us the working behind this lovely machine.. we need to visit this place pleeeease i would really love to go and visit him….. pleeeaseeeeee thank you very much ! All the best
What a fantastic collection! In must have been an amazing amount of time to restore all this beautiful machines to this condition. On some of them I am working nearly every day, and dispite the fact that some of them are over hundred years old, their accuracy is still absolutley top. Many people who visit my workshop are thinking that I just collect them because they are beautiful to look at, but they are still great to work with!
I'm sure they are and love the idea of them still being used!! All the very best to you and have a great day
What an incredible archive of mechanical treasures! Thank you for sharing and explaining. Kudos on the exceptional restoration work. Superb!
Thanks, very appreciated!
Beautiful and very educational video thax!
Very welcome!
Oh my goodness, what a wonderful lifetime of restoration Andra LeShone (sorry about your name spelling sir) you are a very passionate man, you have spent these 40 years doing a job that is priceless. We are in the Untied States and while we have been at this for 15 years to your 40 years we are proud to be made aware of you.
Thanks to the expert standing with you Peter who explains these tools well and to TheWatches.tv crew for finding you. While we have many of these machines and tools like you, we just want to share that we to this day utilize many of them daily as well as we restore them along the way add new ones too often (addiction we think). Anyways Mr. LeShone (sorry again for the spelling) we honor your efforts and thank you so much for allowing the outside world in to see your wonderful work and collection.
Thank you so much for this super appreciated comment and very happy to have brought this to your attention. And also truly happy to heat that you do the same!!! All the very best
So frustrating. I am looking for those machines and they are all right there.
Thank you for this video. As a watchmaker it was both educational and enlightening. Peter was an excellent guide and as mentioned, these are true antiques that while still functional, don’t really exist in modern watchmaking.
Very happy you liked this!!! Thanks for the comment
Excellent video , Stunning collection of tools , a real labor of love and Peter's explanation of there function was brilliant .
Thanks a lot for this
Very educational video and great content as always. The owner really should consider setting up a museum to publicly display and share these amazing pieces.
He would love to, but really the entire collection to be put on display, so naturally a bit complicated to organise. Hopefully one day! Best to you
Outstanding the best show I’ve ever seen. I think the tools are priceless love it.Thank you
I only know most of those tools from my Flume 1906/07 catalog! Thankˋs a lot.
Very welcome, happy you liked it!
Thank you so much for this wonderful video, Marc!
You are very welcome and thanks for watching!
Fantastic video! Thank you very much for sharing!
Merci pour cette vidéo 👍
C'est très enrichissant.
Dommage qu'on ne puisse pas le visiter.
Merci à vous et peut être que dans le futur ce serait possible, on vous tiendra au courant!
I'm sure everyone agrees that's why own a nice time piece is so mesmerizing if you appreciate, what is a behind the final product, very interesting video, thanks guys
That's right, it's the full picture which is important!! Thanks a for watching and the comment
Ahhh great to see you again Marc Andre! Been away from UA-cam but glad I am back for another extraordinary video from my favourite timepiece connoisseur! Always a pleasure Marc, cheers from Kevin, Louisiana, USA
Thanks so much and welcome back ;)
I would actually love to give them to this gentleman since they are a part of history. They would be cared for. He would have loved that!
I had no idea it was a cutter and blades and tourbillon tools
Hello and this is a really nice thought, we can help you coordinate if you want. All the very best to you, have a great day!
Top quality and class this channel ! 👍👍👍
Many many thanks, makes us very happy to hear this!!!
Wow!! This gives a whole new level of appreciation
Fascinating video. A follow-up might be an overview of the external power sources used for such antique gems. Great job!
That's a good idea and I might know just the perfect person for this!!
Absolutely fascinating! I find that last tool with the balance wheel particularly incredible.
Next episode: Tools that makes watch making tools. Perhaps?
We listen ;) All the very best to you and thanks
@@watchestv-com Thank you.
I have come to realise that just about anything related to watch making is a wonderful topic.
And we still have so many stories to tell and share!!!!!!!
A fantastic video, thank you Marc.why did Peter only wear one glove? He put his fingerprints all over the brass work! I'm sure the owner was delighted.
To demonstrate them it is a bit easier ;) Best to you
Absolutely masterpieces of machinery art what a stunning collection!! 😱😱😱💯💯💯💯
Great tour and wonderful restorations, thanks. The working principles are timeless even if their application to watches is fading.🙂
Encore bravo pour l’originalité et la pertinence de vos contenus.
Absolutely outstanding. Great educational video. I have owned a few vintage tools including a hairspring vibrator.
My dream workshop!
Understand why!!!!!
What a fantastic collection and video, thanks Peter for your detailed explanations. This collection needs to be preserved for posterity in a public museum, not least as a monument to this man's dedication in preserving these treasures. If ever you are in Waterford go to the new Irish Museum of Time where fantastic private collections of watches and clocks (mainly) are preserved and presented beautifully. How wonderful it would be to actually see these machines in operation. Just a comment on the wheels with fancy serpentine spokes. When wheels are cast it is well known that the spokes often crack as a result of contraction during the cooling process if they are strictly radial---the serpentine shape provides more flexibility and partly at least alleviates the problem. So as well as decorative, the shape may have a very practical function if the wheels were cast. You will find this technique used on cast wheels on even very humble farm machinery.
Great and fascinating video!
I cannot imagine the amount of work to restore the tools.
I love tools. I would of loved to watch someone work on parts on each of those.
Absolutely mind-blowing
An exceptional video. I'm not a tech geek per se, but Mr Speake Marin must've felt like a kid in a candy shop ;-) My favorite was the tool for pocket watch bows!
That's totally it!!! Thanks a lot for the comment
Many thanks for preparing this great program that teaches the history of birth of watchmaking tools, when i wear a watch I give a lot of appreciation much more than just enjoy it, my special thanks to the collector and restorer of those tools " le Monsieu Andre Lechot " merci merci merci bien, je t' apprecie beaucoup. it will be nice if the producer of this program to give him enough time to express himself, he deserve to speak into the microphone even with his french, sadly it wasn't.
Speake-Marin watches blew me away the first time I handled them and saw their price point. For my personal taste, the lugs and crowns were a bit too much for me. But after seeing this, I feel like I understand his brand much better now (albeit that he is no longer at the company) and am definitely re-interested in trying another on...
Nice attention, thanks and all the very best to you!
Absolutely Fabulous......
Wonderful. thank you.
Very happy you liked it!! Thanks for watching
Nice Video Marc Love it👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Cheers
Alan
Thanks a lot, happy you liked it!
Very fascinating!
Happy you liked it!!
@@watchestv-com I did. Great not to forget about the past.
Highly important to know where we come from!!!
@@watchestv-com Indeed!
Love how the Brits looks after every piece and keeps it in mint condition really will organised nations thanks for this great vids
That was in Switzerland ;) Thanks a lot for watching and all the super best to you
Amazing! Bob
Amazing. Wish I could like this video more than once.
Superb video efforts made me feel that Adreno is my hero
Any chance of making a video describing the much more interesting tools we see in the background?
.""..between everything and nothing": poetry. Let us hope that this collection gets its just rewards. (By the way: blown away!)
Fully agree with you 👍👍
And thanks for the comment
History porn! Watchmaking porn! Mechanical engineering porn! I don't know what to do with my morning now. I can't imagine the thought process and genius that the watchmakers had to design and implement the execution of the specific tools. It's a thing of wonder and beauty. Top video!
Many many thanks, very happy you liked it!!!
wonderful video, please make more! did the manual lathes require 2 people, one to turn the wheel and the other to work on the watch? all the best
we like your videos long marc dont worry!
Ok, got you there ;)
great to see that i'm not the only one wearing a watch on my right arm... i feel weird sometimes lol
I find myself alternating which wrist I'd wear my watch on depending on which particular style of watch i chose to wear at that time, for example my Casio Pro Trek would be on the left, Tag on the right, just depends on mood and destination i guess.
Interesting! ;)