ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX
3 January 2010, 06:30 AM | #1 |
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newbie question about speedking
dont shoot me down boys,thinking of getting the wife a rolex,i have seen a couple on ebay 30mm speedking,6430 ,can anyone tell me more about this model good/bad /prices??? pic's welcome
cheers peter |
3 January 2010, 06:43 AM | #2 |
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Speedkings were re-badged Air Kings.. the smaller size was referred to as "Boys Size"..
Nothing wrong with them... They are more rare than the Air Kings, but no collectors are falling over themselves to collect so prices are still reasonable..
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3 January 2010, 07:12 AM | #3 |
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ok,so a reliable movement? i just like the look and for the wife it would be perfect,not too big not too small
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3 January 2010, 07:56 AM | #4 |
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Peter, remember that if it isn't "perpetual" it's a manual wind watch. If your wife is anything like my GF winding a watch will be about as alien as charging a cell phone!
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"Woody and Jen say hey from North Kakalaki" 19019, 19018x3, 17000x2, 16570x2, 16220, 5700, 1501, 6564, 16030, 16710, 16610 |
3 January 2010, 07:58 AM | #5 |
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never knew that ,cheers
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3 January 2010, 08:13 AM | #6 |
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Czechman....LOL...So True.
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3 January 2010, 08:44 AM | #7 |
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so to wind it up do you just pull the crown out or unscrew like on a sub then wind???(told you i knew nothing)
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3 January 2010, 09:06 AM | #8 |
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I'm not sure but I imagine that you just wind to wind and pull the stem to change time... but I'd like to know for sure myself.
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"Woody and Jen say hey from North Kakalaki" 19019, 19018x3, 17000x2, 16570x2, 16220, 5700, 1501, 6564, 16030, 16710, 16610 |
3 January 2010, 09:39 AM | #9 |
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All Oyster case watches need to be unscrewed to manually wind... Perpetual or not
(There are a few very rare vintage exceptions)
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3 January 2010, 10:09 PM | #10 |
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Thanks for the education... always good to learn something new.
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13 January 2010, 01:09 AM | #11 |
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speedkings are coool...
all the precisions are the style that i like best about rolex, believe it or don't. the manual wind movements are totally accurate, more so than a new perpetual i got five years ago which is now sold the manual precisions (redundant, i know) also have the slimmer profile, which at one time premium watch companies like patek and others were fighting about for claiming rights... further, the 30mm case, 34mm with crown, is the most beautiful creation i think rolex has come up with...has the trademark modern, now classic, rolex lines unencumbered by trying to bulk up to fit a perpetual movement in them...they are a purists dream i just got a speedking precision that has never been polished...few scratches, so it will be going in for a full service and manufacturer grade polish in the next 6 months...luckily it had been worn very little and the beautiful but dastardly oyster bracelet didn't chew up either the lug backs or mess up the space between the lugs...so it's been transferred to a strap and looks simply pure and delightful i'm 6ft, 180, but a lot of the ww2 military issue german/brit/u.s. watches i wear are smaller than it, so the precision speedking fits fine...i do take umbrage at it being called a 'boy's' size, and until someone shows me a rolex ad or literature on the subject, i'll just believe it's a misused and concocted term made up by people who like brix on their wrists as for the accuracy, been spot on with my computer clock for a week now, and with a 58 hour time reserve, easy on the need to wind...though don't get it unless you like unscrewing that sculpted crown every second day...a watchlover's watch no doubt one drawback i've heard from my rolex tech is that the tubes do need to be changed more often with all the screwing and unscrewing ..but it's such a delightful and beautiful watch, what the heck my fave, fer sure fer sure |
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