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Why do men always lack a Rolex?

I believe every man, wishes he could have a Rolex of his own.

Whenever I pass by a Rolex boutique, I can’t help but take a few extra glances.

But then I realised that I am not the only one who does this, but almost most men will look when they pass by there.

I have many male friends around me who often say to me.

Friend A: The prerequisite for marriage is to own a Rolex first.

Friend B: I never cared what I wore, or what shoes I wore, but the watch on my hand had to be a Rolex.

Friend C: I don’t want any other brand of watch since I have a Rolex.

Friend D: Men are just watches, belts, and lighters.

…..

Many people ask me why I go to see it every time I pass by.

I answer this every time, it’s not a watch, it’s a work of art.

Because Rolex has its own unique brand culture and irreplaceability. Even if Patek Philippe were to set a few more diamonds, it could not replace Rolex’s position in the world of watchmaking.

In every Rolex, the blood of perfection, the ultimate, luxury runs through the veins. It is a fascination. Rolex has spent enough time and effort on research and development to build a rocket to send into space, yet they are willing to do nothing more than make a watch in obscurity.

Rolex, it’s a man’s romance.

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Rolex entry level watches for women

Rolex is the world’s most famous watch brand, with fans ranging from presidents and parliamentarians to peddlers and agents, and many people return to wearing the robust, reliable and durable Rolex watches on a daily basis after having bought numerous brands. Rolex is loved by watch enthusiasts for its robustness and has always been synonymous with precision in the field of mass-produced mechanical watches, and here we recommend a few entry-level Rolex watches for women. Women’s watches are extremely feminine, elegant, noble and temperamental when worn on the hands of ladies. The different lines of Rolex watches for women each have their own characteristics and can reveal the charm of different women.

  1. Rolex Women’s Oyster Perpetual 176200 Pink Plate Watch

With a diameter of 26mm, this watch is small and charming in terms of size. The rare pink dial has a light feminine quality. Following the special Rolex Logbook design, the bezel is steel, the case is Oyster and the caseback is screwed down by the brand’s special tool and is deeply water and dust resistant. In addition, the crystal is made of sapphire crystal and the dial is simple, sturdy and practical, making it a starter model – understated and elegant.

  1. Rolex Ladies Oyster Perpetual 177200 Watch

A simpler Rolex women’s watch can also give the female wearer an air of dignified simplicity. This Rolex Women’s Oyster Perpetual Action 177200 watch with white dial is crafted in steel and is drop-dead elegant. The face is very clean and sets off the purity and neatness of the woman. The dial is decorated with Arabic numerals at 3, 6 and 9 o’clock and other bars for a clear hierarchy and readability. The diameter of the watch is 31 mm and the dial is simple and elegant without a calendar. This Rolex women’s watch reflects the noble qualities of the urban woman who wears it, and also represents a fashionable consumer concept.

  1. rolex rolex chronograph roman index 179174 women’s watch

The Rolex models have not changed much and have remained the same for decades, and can be seen from a distance. This Rolex Oyster Perpetual Motion 179174 watch has a 26mm case with minimalist lines and is a great example of a modern classic timepiece. The black dial with Roman numerals gives it a mysterious feel. The precious metal bezel with white gold teeth gives another sense of nobility. A calendar window is provided at 3 o’clock. The date changes instantly at zero hour in just a few milliseconds. The date can be magnified by 2.5 times thanks to the convex magnifying calendar window invented by Rolex in 1953. Powered by the CAL.2235 movement with a 50-hour power reserve and water resistance to 100 metres. The practicality is overwhelming.

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ROLEX unveils its new lineup of watches for 2021

ROLEX is no exception to the trend of unveiling new models for 2021, after last year’s Oyster Perpetual Submariner, Oyster Perpetual and Oyster Perpetual Sky-Dweller. The following is an overview of each of the new models, which are also very popular.

The new Oyster Perpetual Explorer model returns to the classic 36mm size from 1953 and is made from the Manufacture’s patented Oystersteel and Rolesor materials containing 18-carat gold, with 3, 6 and 9 Arabic numerals and The black lacquered dial with 3, 6 and 9 Arabic numerals and Chromalight luminescent hour markers is powered by the calibre 3230, which was launched last year. It is also worth noting that this new Explorer is one of the few cases where the new generation of the same model is priced lower than its predecessor.

The Explorer II (Oyster Perpetual Explorer II) with GMT has also been changed, with the case and refinement being fine-tuned, while the white lacquered dial, matte black PVD coated hour markers and black hands create a contrasting visual impression. The interior has been upgraded to house the automatic calibre 3285, released in 2018.

One of ROLEX’s most iconic models, the Cosmograph Daytona, is naturally one of the most eye-catching of the new 2021 models, with a meteorite dial design and black subdials at 3, 6 and 9 o’clock in contrast to the silvered metal. The 18-carat white gold version comes with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel and black Oysterflex strap, while the 18-carat gold and 18-carat rose gold versions have a metal bezel and Oyster strap and are equipped with the 4130 calibre.

The former, which naturally corresponds to the palm leaf motif of the rainforest on the dial, is available in Oystersteel, Rolesor and Everose Rolesor, while the latter features the fluted bezel that is often used by Rolex. The latter features the fluted bezel, which is often used by Rolex, on a flat gold dial, with a five-part refinement to emphasise its sophisticated luxury.

In addition to unveiling the new 2021 line-up of Explorer, Explorer II, Cosmograph Daytona and Datejust 36 models, ROLEX also brought another surprise with the launch of the popular GMT-Master II models 126710BLNR and 126710BLRO, known as Batman and Pepsi. The new Oyster strap will replace the 126710BLRO and 126710BLR.

Both models were launched with the Jubilee five-compartment metal bracelet, and although there is no doubt about their originality, there is undeniably still a strong demand for the Oyster bracelet, especially for its sportier look, and of course the Oysterlock safety clasp and Easylink 5mm patented easy-adjust links are not missing.

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If you don’t have a Rolex, it’s not that people look down on you, they simply don’t see you

The first time I arrived at the Rolex boutique, my father had told me, son, when I am rich, I must buy a Rolex, I asked why, my father said …… no reason, maybe this is the Rolex in my father’s generation branded mark it

Today, let’s talk about Rolex, why it has endured, look at it is indeed shocking!

Rolex as one of the world’s top watches, why a hundred years can continue to maintain the heat?

In a word, Rolex is tough enough. Reliable, accurate and durable, these are the shining labels of Rolex.

  • Having its own laboratory

Rolex has several laboratories at its headquarters in Switzerland, equipped with a strong team of researchers. The team even includes chemists and geologists. This team is “obsessed” with researching and improving all kinds of watch-making techniques: there is a chemistry laboratory, lubricants to make the production lines run more smoothly, geologists to study the purity of diamonds, and people to formulate Rolex’s exclusive gold.

They get 24-carat gold from their suppliers, but they don’t use it directly in their watches. Instead, they have their own research and development team take this 24-carat gold and blend it to create a gold that is gold-toned, non-tarnishable, resistant to oxidation and corrosion, beautiful and durable, and made to be used in Rolex watches.

  • All movements are assembled and tested by hand

Rolex is assembled by hand, from movement to bracelet, except for the steps that are not suitable for assembly by hand. Historically, watchmakers were able to certify their own chronometers, a process that clearly entailed the risk of fraud. To guarantee the quality of its chronometers, Rolex has chosen to submit its watches to official certification, regardless of the cost and the extra time required. The constant-force movements are renowned for their chronometric performance. The movements are not only works of art, but extraordinary miniature creations, combining at the same time a variety of shapes, forms, volumes, colours and surfaces, some finishes polished, some with circular graining, meticulously crafted.

  • Rolex has no supplier of accessories

A Rolex Submariner (self-winding mechanical watch, calibre 3135) comprises a total of more than 200 parts. These 200 or so parts are entirely forged, polished, machined and assembled by Rolex itself, part by part, in a factory in Switzerland, taking rough steel. In other words, this factory only imports raw materials from outside, such as steel, gold and diamonds.

All the forging and post-processing of raw materials is carried out in Rolex’s own closed factory. This is why their technology is so confidential and independent that they do not rely on any suppliers, and the outside world has no access to the methods, moulds or channels used to process these components.

This is why the watch industry has a saying: “Rolex watches are just as good as money”.

  • Only Rolex uses 904L steel in the world.

This type of steel has several advantages: firstly, it is more resistant to corrosion and rust than other steels, and it is also stronger. Secondly, it is clear that 904L steel gives a more beautiful finish to bracelets and dials, whether brushed or polished.

But 904L is more expensive and costly than other steels. This is because 904L steel has the disadvantage that as the steel gets harder, it becomes more difficult to forge. Rolex had to change all the production lines associated with forging steel in order to use this steel. No watchmaker has ever had to change an entire production line at any cost for the slightest difference in the polish of the steel, which is very costly. Rolex’s steel watches are a drop in the bucket, so to speak, much more so than Omega’s!

  • With sophisticated watchmaking instruments

Rolex has more sophisticated, high-class watchmaking machinery than any other watchmaker, and adheres to a watchmaking philosophy that brings out the best in machines and human hands.

  • A rigorous production process is followed

It usually takes around a year to complete all the formalities, from forging the metal, machining the parts, fitting the movement, assembling the bracelet, testing, secondary testing and re-checking, to the completion of a top-quality chronometer, certified by the Swiss Chronometer Testing Centre (COSC) and, after assembly, certified by Rolex and packaged for shipment (despite an annual production of one million pieces or more). Each Rolex is produced through a rigorous process and there are no shortcuts.

So when you get a brand new Rolex watch from an authorised dealer, don’t doubt its quality, because the watch has been abused in the Rolex factory for I don’t know how many hundreds of times.

So how exactly do you pick a Rolex?

It’s really quite difficult, but if you really want to get your hands on a Rolex, leave us a comment and we’ll give you a recommendation based on your situation ^^

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Why is a Rolex unrepeatable?

If Rolex were a man, he would be a Capricorn with an extreme attention to detail.

There is a general consensus among watch collectors that there are two kinds of watchmakers in this world: those called watchmakers and those called Rolex.

But anyone who knows anything about Rolex’s watchmaking skills will be in doubt. When you find out what the company has done, what it is currently doing and what it intends to do in the future, you become more and more puzzled: Rolex has spent enough time and effort on research and development to build a rocket to send into space, and yet they are willing to do nothing more than make a watch in obscurity.

Today we will look at why Rolex cannot be replicated and why even a few more diamonds from Patek Philippe would not replace Rolex in the world of watchmaking.

Secrecy and independence comparable to printing money

All Rolex watches are assembled part by part by experts in a Swiss factory. This is something you probably all know.

But what you may not know is that Rolex does not have a supplier of spare parts. What does that mean?

For example, a Rolex Submariner (a self-winding mechanical watch, calibre 3135) includes a total of over 200 parts. These 200+ parts are entirely forged, polished, machined and assembled by Rolex in its own factory in Switzerland, taking the rough steel, one part at a time.

In other words, the factory only imports raw materials from outside, such as steel, gold, diamonds and so on.

The forging and post-processing of all the raw materials is carried out in Rolex’s own closed factory. This is why their technology is so secret and independent that they do not rely on any suppliers and the outside world has no access to the methods, moulds and channels used to process these components.

This is why the watch industry has a saying: “Rolex watches are just as good as money”.

A year to build a watch

As we all know, in 1953 Rolex was the first to push the limits of diving watches to one thousand feet underwater (about 300 metres). This was also the origin of the Blackwater Ghost.

Their Oyster Perpetual technology, from which the name derives: the watch is as strong and water-resistant as an oyster in the water, and the constant motion is synonymous with self-winding mechanical watches.

This technology and design is now blatantly copied by several well-known watchmakers, whom I will not name here.

To this day, more than 60 years later, every Rolex Oyster watch is subjected to very rigorous air, water and temperature tests after it has been assembled. The case of the watch is tested twice, before the movement is fitted, and twice afterwards, to ensure tightness.

This extensive and rigorous factory inspection process can be described as “demanding”. It usually takes about a year to complete the process of forging the metal, machining the parts, fitting the movement, assembling the bracelet, testing it, testing it twice, testing it again, and then packaging it for delivery.

That’s right, a year to build a watch.

It seems that Rolex’s goal is to torture this freshly assembled watch by all means to see when it goes wrong: “If you’re going to go wrong, you’d better give it to me to go wrong in the factory.”

So when you get a brand new Rolex watch from an authorised dealer, don’t doubt its quality, because the watch has been abused in the Rolex factory for I don’t know how many hundreds of times.

904L

When you talk about Rolex, you have to mention the steel they use – 904L, the only steel used by any watchmaker in the world.

Why?

In fact, at the beginning, Rolex used the most common steel for its watches, just like everyone else. But since 2003, Rolex’s R&D team has discovered that 904L actually has the following advantages.

Firstly, this type of steel, which is more resistant to corrosion and rust than other steels, is also stronger.

Secondly, it is clear that 904L steel, polished to produce a more aesthetically pleasing bracelet and dial, whether it is brushed or polished.

You may ask, if this steel is so good, why don’t other watchmakers use it? As far as I know, other watchmakers, at best, vaguely tell you that the watch is made of steel, rather than explicitly telling you that it is 904L steel, as Rolex does.

Firstly because 904L is more expensive than other steels and costs more. More importantly, this 904L has the disadvantage that as the steel gets harder, it becomes more difficult to forge. Rolex had to change all the production lines associated with forging steel in order to use this steel.

No watchmaker has ever had to change an entire production line for the slightest difference in steel polishing, and the cost is so high that to this day, no company has ever bothered to use 904L for its watches.

Rolex’s obsession with perfection is thus evident.

The schoolmaster of the watch world

You might think that Rolex is just about as good as it gets when it comes to developing a watch model, or water resistance.

Not really, they have several laboratories at their headquarters in Switzerland, equipped with a strong research team. They even have chemists and geologists on their team.

This team is “obsessed” with researching and improving all sorts of watch-making techniques: there is a chemistry lab that specialises in lubricants to make the production line run more smoothly, a geologist to study the purity of diamonds and a specialist to formulate Rolex’s exclusive gold.

Yes, they get 24-carat gold from their suppliers, but they don’t use it directly on their watches. Instead, they have their own research and development team take this 24-carat gold and blend it with a gold shade that doesn’t tarnish easily, that doesn’t oxidise or corrode easily, that is beautiful and durable, and that is unique to Rolex.

It’s very tortoise-like, isn’t it?

So if Rolex were a man, he would be a Capricorn who is extremely fussy about details.

Understatement is the best form of bravado

Some people say that a Rolex is not fancy enough, that it is not flashy enough, that it is too understated.

But showing off isn’t even in the Rolex blood. Many luxury watchmakers, in order to show off how great their movements are, use transparent dials so that the consumer can see every turn of the inside of their movements in order to stimulate the desire to buy.

Rolex does no such thing. They have never used any transparent dials, or transparent casebacks. The philosophy is simple: we are Rolex and we don’t need to bare our breasts to prove ourselves.

Here’s what I like about Rolex: they are ostensibly a watchmaker, but they have developed (and continue to develop) technologies and materials that don’t exist in the industry, have an almost obsessive (crazy) quest for perfection, and have always had a pedigree of understatement and calm, building a watch with the precision of a submarine by hand, day in, day out, for over a hundred years since they were founded. Nothing more is required.

You can see why other watchmakers can only ever be watchmakers, while the values behind the letters Rolex cannot be replicated.

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buy Breitling Navitimer watches replica online

The Bright Ring Navitimer was launched in 1952, using the design and movement of Bright Ring’s famous Chronomat chronograph. Since then, it has turned into a powerful aviation device. The Navitimer’s sliding bezel was designed to solve logarithmic calculations in flight, not only as a watch, but also as a wrist navigation computer for today’s pilots.

The first Fake breitling carried the “Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association” logo due to concerns of the aviation industry. Early navigators, such as the 806, used the Venus 178 movement. Brightring improved its marine clocks throughout the 1950s and 1960s, replacing the Venus 178 with the Barge 72 movement in 1954 and finally with the Barge 7740 movement in the late 1960s. With the Valjoux 7740, Navitimer achieved a new achievement: dating.

From the 1960s to the 1970s, the quartz watch had evolved from an experimental success to a large-scale commercial success. Then Brightling faced a crisis. We tried to adapt by offering the Quartz Navitimer and our own digital LCD display. But that wasn’t enough to save the watchmaker.

Brightling’s financial problems led to a change in ownership, as did the Navitimer. The watch resurfaced in the 1990s with the Balju 7750 movement and in 2003 with the ETA 2892.

Until 2009, the modern replica breitling Navitimer watches was entirely Breitling’s own watch. The 2009 Navitimer was the first Navitimer to feature the Bright Ring 01 movement, the in-house movement used in the current Navitimer watch collection.

To celebrate Navitimer’s long and interesting history, we’ve examined three of the most popular Navitimer models.
The Bright Ring Navitimer Chronograph A23322
Introduced in 2003, the Navitimer Chronograph A23322 is a classic bright ring Navitimer. With a 42mm case, stainless steel slide rule bezel and large dial, the Navitimer is a stylish watch that blends aviation and adventure.

The A23322 combines the tool watch functions of the original Navitimer with the latest available complications. Notable features include a 5 o’clock display window and a 42-hour power reserve. Water resistance up to 30 meters.

The latest Navitimer A23322 comes in three dial colors: black, white and blue. Most models also come with a unique 22mm Navitimer bracelet.