Wibbles
路Didn't realise there was an introduction thread. I just signed up and barged in. 馃槵 Pardon what passes for my manners.
I'm from Dublin Ireland, collecting "old' watches since I was a callow youth in the early 80's. My dad was into watches(Longines man through and through*), so I blame him. 馃榾
Have been lurking on the forum for ages, but *blasphemy alert* since I was never that big an Omega collector(though I've had a few), thought I'd be an interloper. But the community is much more inclusive than that so here I am.
Mostly collect Longines, transitional watches, military, tool watches, very early quartz/battery and oddballs(like myself). Cheapskate too. My general rule is to not pay more than around 2-300 euro/dollars/pounds for a vintage watch. The most I've spent was a 1000 quid on a Heuer Bund a few years back and I sweated bullets on that. 馃榾 Still, folks may be surprised what one can still collect even going full tightfisted.
If I were to sum up my collection this pic would come close enough:
1916 Longines Trench with it's great grandson a 1971 Longines Ultraquartz. It's just possible a young apprentice starting out in Longines when the former was current, might have been around long enough to see the latter come out. They both tell the time, but couldn't be any more different under the skin. Both the height of technology and the "future" of their times and the shape of things to come and a snapshot of 20th century progress(though the oul lad is way more reliable and robust 馃榾 ).
*though he had a couple of Pateks, and Omegas and also bought one of the first Seiko calculator digitals in 1977. He just loved watches.
I'm from Dublin Ireland, collecting "old' watches since I was a callow youth in the early 80's. My dad was into watches(Longines man through and through*), so I blame him. 馃榾
Have been lurking on the forum for ages, but *blasphemy alert* since I was never that big an Omega collector(though I've had a few), thought I'd be an interloper. But the community is much more inclusive than that so here I am.
Mostly collect Longines, transitional watches, military, tool watches, very early quartz/battery and oddballs(like myself). Cheapskate too. My general rule is to not pay more than around 2-300 euro/dollars/pounds for a vintage watch. The most I've spent was a 1000 quid on a Heuer Bund a few years back and I sweated bullets on that. 馃榾 Still, folks may be surprised what one can still collect even going full tightfisted.
If I were to sum up my collection this pic would come close enough:
1916 Longines Trench with it's great grandson a 1971 Longines Ultraquartz. It's just possible a young apprentice starting out in Longines when the former was current, might have been around long enough to see the latter come out. They both tell the time, but couldn't be any more different under the skin. Both the height of technology and the "future" of their times and the shape of things to come and a snapshot of 20th century progress(though the oul lad is way more reliable and robust 馃榾 ).
*though he had a couple of Pateks, and Omegas and also bought one of the first Seiko calculator digitals in 1977. He just loved watches.