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Looking for the right gen vintage


jmt

Which do you like better  

21 members have voted

  1. 1. Choice #1 or Choice #2 (at 2x the price of choice 1)

    • Snowflake
      4
    • GMT
      17


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Hi. For a bunch of reasons, I am having a 'I am done with reps day...' OK, I'm not done, but it's put me of the mind to grab a special gen. So, I know what I like and have been doing some searching. Which of these two would you choose?

snow.jpg

or

Rolex_16750.jpg

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i'm not familiar with prices on the snowflake, but for the gmt, it really depends on what you're looking for.

prices for an all-original 1675 seem to be in the $5,500 to $6,000 range, depending on the condition. but you can pick one up for considerably less than that (as low as $3,750) if having the original dial/hands/insert isn't that important to you. keep an eye on timezone, ebay and the other used watch sales forums -- there are generally quite a few out there at any given time.

shoot me a PM if you'd like some other sites to track.

hope this helps,

deltatahoe

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Is this a piece to wear? Or to put away?

GMT's have been slowly on the rise; if you're going to go for one, I'd personally consider a 16750, as the quick set date is something you'll come to appreciate quickly. Of the several 1570's I've dealt with, the slow set date has always left a bad taste in my mouth. That is, unless you plan on wearing the watch on a daily basis, to which case keeping the date up to current isn't much of an issue; you'll only have to deal with setting the date on 30 day calendar months :)

If you're after a Tudor Snowflake, go for an M.N. 7016 or 7021 with Military papers. If you're after a piece to simply wear, I think a 9411 is a nice way to go. If you can bump your price range up a bit, a 7928 can be within obtainable range.

The one problem with a lot of vintage pieces is that they're not always correct. Sometimes you'll have some wonky parts fitted or some hackneyed fix performed.

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Is this a piece to wear? Or to put away?

GMT's have been slowly on the rise; if you're going to go for one, I'd personally consider a 16750, as the quick set date is something you'll come to appreciate quickly. Of the several 1570's I've dealt with, the slow set date has always left a bad taste in my mouth. That is, unless you plan on wearing the watch on a daily basis, to which case keeping the date up to current isn't much of an issue; you'll only have to deal with setting the date on 30 day calendar months :)

If you're after a Tudor Snowflake, go for an M.N. 7016 or 7021 with Military papers. If you're after a piece to simply wear, I think a 9411 is a nice way to go. If you can bump your price range up a bit, a 7928 can be within obtainable range.

The one problem with a lot of vintage pieces is that they're not always correct. Sometimes you'll have some wonky parts fitted or some hackneyed fix performed.

Thanks, Ubi. I'll likely wear it-- I wear them all sometimes--

I really love the GMT-- It's a 16750. If I post more pics, can you help me figure out how correct it is? Seems pricey to me... ~7k.

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Ahhh... Well, for one, it's an InterWatches watch for sale. Everything from them is pricey. Also... The watch posted looks like a 1675; I only see an 'OYSTER PERPETUAL' under Rolex (16750's have OYSTER PERPETUAL DATE).

:)

$7k definitely seems high for a 16750.

Edit: Interestingly enough, I looked through some scans of early 16750's and those do indeed reflect 'OYSTER PERPEUTUAL' only; no DATE.

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Price- Depending on age, condition, complete package, etc. can start as low as $3500 and scale as high as $11k(?!). I think these higher end figures are optimistic prices; not sure how many are actually trading hands at these levels.

Interesting... Wasn't that long ago that a 1675 was only $3k.

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Do a lot of reading and get to know the various weird combinations Rolex produced for their models... then shop armed with that knowledge.

I picked up my 1675 a year and a half ago for $2800 because it had a rare dial. The other bidders were afraid of it, unsure if it had a genuine dial. So I got it for a steal. :tu:

gmt_3c.jpg

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darn... u r comparin a ferrari with a hyundai...

1675 all life long

Not a very wise comment - 7016 and 7021 are the collectible Tudors - and appreciated by many collectors these days. I don't see why it is a worse watch than the 16750 - also movement wise - the 16750 has a very common caliber immanent problem with the cannon pinion. 3075 is not the most praised Rolex movement...

Many people prefer the Tudor because of it looking like a vintage Sub but without the Rolex name. If it's your first genuine Rolex/Tudor - go for the Tudor - nobody will ask if it's fake. :) And everybody in the know will honor your great taste. If yo udo your homework you will find a nice piece - pref with B&P and as Ubi said with MN numbering - some call it the poor man's Comex. :) It was delivered to the French Marine Nationale...

Be aware though, many fake and Franekn Tudors around - but after reading a bit you will ID a gen from a fake 100%.

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I have done a lot of research about the GMT lately. Finding a 100% original 1675 is not easy... and definitely not below $5K. If the watch is 100% original and has full paperwork, today's prices are at least in the $7K range... if not above that.

I'm still kicking myself for not buying a 1675 three years ago, when the prices were still very low. Nanuq's timing was perfect.

Not sure about 16750, but I believe they're in the same price range. Depending on the condition and accessories.

Yeah, I completely agree... that Ferrari/Hyundai comparison was silly. Rolex movements aren't considerably better than ETA's, and Tudor has a Rolex case. These Snowflakes are becoming highly collectible. But yeah, I would still get the GMT before the prices become utterly ridiculous (and all indicators are saying they will).

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Well, I'd say that Rolex movements are better than ETA movements. But the ETA movement in Tudor watches are not plain ETA's - they were highly modified by Rolex - new shock assembly, high grade finish and very tight tolerance pivots etc... making the movement almost as good as a Rolex 1570. Still - I would doubt that a Tudor 2484 would runs as long as a 1570 would - unserviced. There ar reports of 1570 equipped watches running as long as 26 years years of daily wear without service.

I like the Ferrari Maserati comparison - much better than the Hyundai. :) both excellent puppies.

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Thanks for the great replies, guys! Confirms what I wanted to do anyway... now to pull the trigger...

Ahhh... Well, for one, it's an InterWatches watch for sale. Everything from them is pricey. Also... The watch posted looks like a 1675; I only see an 'OYSTER PERPETUAL' under Rolex (16750's have OYSTER PERPETUAL DATE).

:)

$7k definitely seems high for a 16750.

Edit: Interestingly enough, I looked through some scans of early 16750's and those do indeed reflect 'OYSTER PERPEUTUAL' only; no DATE.

Did you ever try barganing with InterWatches? Not sure how to do that given the call center environment...

I have done a lot of research about the GMT lately. Finding a 100% original 1675 is not easy... and definitely not below $5K. If the watch is 100% original and has full paperwork, today's prices are at least in the $7K range... if not above that.

I'm still kicking myself for not buying a 1675 three years ago, when the prices were still very low. Nanuq's timing was perfect.

Not sure about 16750, but I believe they're in the same price range. Depending on the condition and accessories.

Yeah, I completely agree... that Ferrari/Hyundai comparison was silly. Rolex movements aren't considerably better than ETA's, and Tudor has a Rolex case. These Snowflakes are becoming highly collectible. But yeah, I would still get the GMT before the prices become utterly ridiculous (and all indicators are saying they will).

Thanks a ton, BT... that and Nanuq and FxrAndy's comments make me feel a lot better about the price on this beauty!

EDIT: But, BT, if the watch comes only with RSC papers, how does that change your value assessment?

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Guys, one last question (ok, not LAST!)...

This deal is 7k. It is clean and nice, but has the wrong bracelet and only RSC papers

I have another 16750. It's $8700. Its a little less beautiful, but still totally original with a nice patina, corrent bracelet, and punched papers.

So, my question for those who know far more than I do... are papers and a bracelet worth $1700?

Thanks for all your help, guys!

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