It has become my every day watch. So comfortable to wear it. It has a precise accuracy. I have measured it in 62 seconds slow in 16 days. That is less than -4 seconds/day.
I'm going to the Manhattan Tissot store tomorrow to check these out, although it's going to be hard to beat my Nomos Club Campus when it comes to an updated take on the traditional time-only watch.
i have an update about my tissot, after 1 year. It does not run -3s/day, anymore. Now, it runs around +15 seconds/month., that is around +0,5s/day. I cannot be;ieve it, but it is a fact. Love it. (i hand wind it 10-12 rounds every morning and 10-12 rounds every night. I think this the reason it runs so accurately...)
Acabo de pedir el color salmón, lo recibiré en dos semanas, será mi primer cronometro y mi primer reloj del grupo Swatch que no tiene el Powermatic80 😅
I bought one five days ago. Well, it is really a good looking watch, but I have noticed one problem. The minute hand is not exact on the minute mark when the seconds hand reaches the 12 mark. Between 12 and 6, the minute hand is almost correctly aligned on the minutes marks when seconds hand reaches the 12 mark. Between 6 and 12 the alignment of the minute hand is not OK. I will contact tissot customer's service hoping for a solution.
Have you been setting it up right? Whenever I set up my automatic watch I always stop the second at 12 or 30 and put the minute hand accordingly, either on or right between the minute markers.
@@coniferslav8957 yup, this is what I have been doing. I will see if it keeps doing it in a week from now. It is very accurate. Less than 2 seconds/24 hours slow. Very light, very comfortable and readable. No luminous, but that is OK.
@@Xraycrayon well if visually comparable, there’s a fair price difference between the Tissot (900 euros) and the Longines (2600 euros) so it’s mostly according to the budget
It’s beautiful but they made it way too big. This watch is all dial and wears really big. This should have been 36-37mm it looks huge on the wrist shown in the video.
I mean, yeah the small seconds one does, but that one is all over the place with the silver small seconds, the textured dial, the silver outerring. It's not simple and clean like the two main ones.
If only Tissot release these in smaller sizes like between 35 to 37mm. These are still too big!! They could even do the smaller sizes as handwind versions, still COSC please. The smaller version of the small seconds should be at 37mm and also be a central seconds instead, and that would appeal to enthusiasts looking for an alternative to the Tudor Tuxedo or the UG Polerouter for the looks
@@jacobplatt3066Muchos preferimos los movimientos de antes al Powermatic80, esa reserva de 80 horas solo le importa a aquellos que no son coleccionistas 😅
Subscribed! And best news... I can FINALLY (AFTER YEARS) can buy 🙌 a TISSOT with a DECENT MOVEMENT!
❤
It has become my every day watch. So comfortable to wear it. It has a precise accuracy. I have measured it in 62 seconds slow in 16 days. That is less than -4 seconds/day.
That's very good, and it should be considering the fact it's regulated to chronometer standards.
then you have to be appreciated of eta and not tissot
That would look so good in white!
I just saw an ad for one in white .
Tissot has finally come to their senses
Hello… i allready bought the salmón dial… love it
Good on you, very nice watch!! Lots of style points that work very well with this one. Enjoy!!
I love this watch. It is a strong contender to be my next purchase.
It's very cool! Sensible purchase, with plenty of style!
Months ago I bought the salmon one, running excellent -1sec/day.
Cool!! Thanks for sharing, and enjoy the watch!
I'm going to the Manhattan Tissot store tomorrow to check these out, although it's going to be hard to beat my Nomos Club Campus when it comes to an updated take on the traditional time-only watch.
And how did you experience it? Could it hold a candle to your Nomos you feel?
@@Monochrome-watchesguy doesn't like candles 😂
@@Monochrome-watchesCandle burnt out
i have an update about my tissot, after 1 year. It does not run -3s/day, anymore. Now, it runs around +15 seconds/month., that is around +0,5s/day. I cannot be;ieve it, but it is a fact. Love it. (i hand wind it 10-12 rounds every morning and 10-12 rounds every night. I think this the reason it runs so accurately...)
That's actually incredibly accurate! Very cool!
Acabo de pedir el color salmón, lo recibiré en dos semanas, será mi primer cronometro y mi primer reloj del grupo Swatch que no tiene el Powermatic80 😅
I think Ill go for the Salmón or the small seconds i really like Tissot watches
I bought one five days ago. Well, it is really a good looking watch, but I have noticed one problem. The minute hand is not exact on the minute mark when the seconds hand reaches the 12 mark. Between 12 and 6, the minute hand is almost correctly aligned on the minutes marks when seconds hand reaches the 12 mark. Between 6 and 12 the alignment of the minute hand is not OK. I will contact tissot customer's service hoping for a solution.
Have you been setting it up right? Whenever I set up my automatic watch I always stop the second at 12 or 30 and put the minute hand accordingly, either on or right between the minute markers.
@@coniferslav8957 yup, this is what I have been doing. I will see if it keeps doing it in a week from now. It is very accurate. Less than 2 seconds/24 hours slow. Very light, very comfortable and readable. No luminous, but that is OK.
My salmon watch also has the same issue. It seems like it was originally like that.
least expensive cosc?
Could very well be, it's priced very accessibly.
This or longines heritage military ?
@@Xraycrayon well if visually comparable, there’s a fair price difference between the Tissot (900 euros) and the Longines (2600 euros) so it’s mostly according to the budget
It’s beautiful but they made it way too big. This watch is all dial and wears really big. This should have been 36-37mm it looks huge on the wrist shown in the video.
The size is pretty much on the nose for most people, but the design would indeed work wonders in 36mm too!
glad they did it this size, I usually wear 44-47mm so for dress size 39-41 is solid for my wrist
Mmm hmmm... Maximum 38 mm
I just wished it had a date marker. I need that for what I do. But other than that, it is perfect.
But it does have one
@@turnbasedtoddy7664 Where?
I mean, yeah the small seconds one does, but that one is all over the place with the silver small seconds, the textured dial, the silver outerring. It's not simple and clean like the two main ones.
@@christianklintholm Yeah I was referring to the small seconds.
If only Tissot release these in smaller sizes like between 35 to 37mm. These are still too big!! They could even do the smaller sizes as handwind versions, still COSC please. The smaller version of the small seconds should be at 37mm and also be a central seconds instead, and that would appeal to enthusiasts looking for an alternative to the Tudor Tuxedo or the UG Polerouter for the looks
No powermatic 80 ? what a strange move from Tissot!
It was unexpected, but it sort of makes sense if you look at it from the 'traditional' style the watchhas.
I rather this movement that the 80 as despite the power reserve, this calibre can be calibrated where as the 80 cannot
@@jacobplatt3066Muchos preferimos los movimientos de antes al Powermatic80, esa reserva de 80 horas solo le importa a aquellos que no son coleccionistas 😅
This always bothers me because what if it isn’t available in 20 years. I always get OCD about that.
Tissot has come to their senses!