Pound-for-pound the Royal Pop is a more interesting watch than a PRX
Not comparing the mechanism or "value for money" in terms of component cost but it's a more interesting and notable as a (?) watch
Not comparing the mechanism or "value for money" in terms of component cost but it's a more interesting and notable as a (?) watch
Listen, those 42 mm just do not look good on small wrists
Inspired by the recent iteration of the Swatch System51 discussion, I would ask the community to discuss at what price point they would not bother to repair their repairable watch? I've got no actual stats in front of me but would assume that a basic Seiko/Tissot/Citizen gets approximately 0 post-retail services.
For me, I would likely sell/get rid of a watch I have no attachment to if the repair cost is above 50% of the used price or so. I understand the "I like to have the option to" is a valid argument too. Not applied to watches that have sentimental value.
Collected big clumps of moss+algae across several tanks. Pretty extreme tangling. Would usually bin it but could actually do with some fresh moss right now.
Any "systematic" way to remove the algae stuff? Hydrogen peroxide bath to fry the algae first? Put the whole thing in a dark corner to starve off the algae?
I could detangle but there's always some algae bits left in practice. Plus just wanting to try something new. Any advice appreciated.
So Google now has a Find My analogue. Do any of the Fitbit devices pop up on it? Ideally in the phone connection-less mode too
I have a beloved hoodless jacket that I wore for years before finally biting the bullet and just adding some studs to the collar. I even added an extra popper to the good for additional strength. +10 points to overall functionality now.
Any reason why this is not just 101 advice?
Official repairs and alterations wouldn't do it btw. However, seems pretty low risk as an endeavour