r/TheWatchEdit

Image 1 — A-168 fit. A saga in 3 parts.
Image 2 — A-168 fit. A saga in 3 parts.
Image 3 — A-168 fit. A saga in 3 parts.
Image 4 — A-168 fit. A saga in 3 parts.
▲ 15 r/TheWatchEdit+1 crossposts

A-168 fit. A saga in 3 parts.

I received my A-168 about 3 months ago, and really struggled with the fit. It was either too tight and giving me wrist and hand issues, or it would hang over my hand - no in between.

My first solution was to wear it loose, but with rubber spacers, which helped, but definitely was not a long term solution.

Next, I used some Ali Express coupons to get myself a new watchband, but realised that the endlinks were too thick to fit under the hood (despite the listing stating that it fits the A-168). So I used a bench grinder to take off about 0.5mm all the way around the housing. Fortunately, the new bracelet came with quick release pins, so I could grind and test - nonetheless, this took a good hour to get right (it's 98% there, so need to skim a bit more and then finish it nicely). You can see there are still marks on the band where it meets the watch that need to be finished. The fit was now better, but still not perfect since the new band still didn't have micro adjust (it was more of a risk than a sure shot, so I knew this may not resolve the issue).

Then, I purchased a Watchdives 16mm clasp, with 5 micro adjust holes, and fitted it this morning, and I finally have a comfortable fit.

All in, $70 for the A-168 (I live in South Africa, and that's just the price here); about $5 for the new watch band and about $12 for the Watchdives clasp.

Yes, it's all a bit mad, but that's just the nature of watch collecting - we're all a bit nuts.

Feel free to ask any questions.

u/meerkatjie87 — 2 days ago

vivienne westwood watch battery replacement

hello. I bought a second hand vivienne westwood mens watch camden lock and i was wondering if there's a way to replace the battery without having to get it done professionally as it would be significantly cheaper.

u/PuzzleheadedElk3384 — 2 days ago

What's a watch "truth" that most beginners don't realize until it's too late?

I'll start: Never judge a watch solely by its specs on paper, wearability matters just as much and knowing your maximum wrist span so you avoid buying watches that are either too small or just way too large for your wrist.

reddit.com
u/TheWatchEdit — 5 days ago
▲ 10 r/TheWatchEdit+2 crossposts

[Skeleton Watches] Bare Bones Brilliance or Dead Trend Walking?

I feel like my interest in skeleton-type watches peaked about 10 years ago and since I haven’t had much interest despite the rise in “RM” style watches which also often spark debate.

I received the Stuhrling pictured as a gift many years back now, and got the Ciga Design around the holidays one year at an ultra discounted price. Whats funny is I almost always get compliments (from probably non-watch people) if I ever decide to throw them on the wrist. Both tick remarkably well and the Ciga Design is actually pretty thin compared to other Tonneau style skeletons in its price range.

Still for me, I almost completely pass over skeletons when browsing and pay almost no attention to them despite the varying styles- open heart, full skeleton, tonneau, etc. Unless convinced differently, I’ll pass on them. Where do you land? r/WatchChapters

u/Shebs33 — 6 days ago
▲ 18 r/TheWatchEdit+2 crossposts

Nobody warns you about this when you get into watches.

You think the hobby is about craftsmanship, heritage, mechanical artistry, think again.

It's about getting on your hands and knees at midnight with a flashlight, praying you bought spare spring bars, because the one in your hand just turned into a guided missile and vanished into another dimension.

Tell me I'm not alone here.

https://youtube.com/shorts/eV7QiK4Vv4I?si=I0i8EojsPZ_GidiB

u/TheWatchEdit — 6 days ago

Do yourself a favor and watch this video

Found a genuinely unbiased watch breakdown, no brand loyalty, no fanboy pushing.

Been in this hobby a while and it's rare to find someone who isn't just shilling for a brand. Ben's video breaks things down straight, no "just buy this because it's cool" nonsense.

Worth a watch if you're new to the hobby or just tired of the usual marketing spin out there:

https://youtu.be/HNFR3EYQoJ0

Curious what others here think of his takes.

u/TheWatchEdit — 4 days ago
▲ 129 r/TheWatchEdit+2 crossposts

Primeira vez postando a coleção.

Sempre postava fotos individuais, agora uma da coleção. Uma pena que parece que as fotos perdem qualidade quando postadas.

u/jlucasreis — 9 days ago

I wore 3 watches for 10 years. Came back to the hobby last year September. Here's what 20+ Chinese brands taught me in under a year.

Okay so a bit of context before the list.

I basically fell out of this hobby for a very long time. For the better part of 10+ years I was rotating between just 3 watches. Three.

A 36mm Casio my Dad left me when he passed. A 41mm entry-level Swiss made watch my wife gifted me on a trip to Switzerland. And a cheap 40mm rubber strap watch I grabbed off Amazon.

If I count everything back to childhood, I've probably owned around 15 watches across my entire life which most of them I've already lost hence the 3 watches I have. So yeah, not exactly a deep collection.

Then September last year happened. I had been watching Jody from JOMW and David Schwartz on his review of the Rocos R0139 and thought I like the design. Did a lot of digging online. I found this community and decided to get the Specht & Söhne Nautilus clomage watch, and something clicked back into place, the way it does when you rediscover something you forgot you loved.

Since then I've gone deep, started a Youtube channel trying to document the whole journey. Owned or handled watches from over 20 Chinese brands in under a year, which honestly feels insane to type out. But here we are.

What I lack in decades of collector experience I make up for in fresh eyes and zero brand loyalty. I'm not protecting anyone's feelings here, every brand on this list is something I've personally worn on my wrist. I know a lot of you have been in this game far longer than I have and probably have lists twice or thrice this size. Genuinely drop them in the comments. I'm here to learn as much as I am to share. This is just what I actually think after wearing these things, at least personally so these are very subjective as things can get.

Criteria: finishing, build quality, movement choice, value, wearability, brand identity, and whether I'd actually recommend it to someone getting into this hobby. Here we go!

🏆 TOP TIER — Buy without hesitation

San Martin — The benchmark. Arguably the most complete package in Chinese watchmaking right now. Exceptional case finishing, thoughtful dial execution, and a size range that actually serves different wrist sizes, 36mm, 39mm, 40mm, 42mm. That's rare and it matters. Their small diver game is particularly strong. The after-sales reputation is earned.

Proxima — Sits right alongside San Martin and deserves more mainstream recognition than it gets. Where San Martin wins on execution, Proxima wins on dial creativity, aventurine options, bold colorways, designs that don't feel like they're apologizing for existing. They send timegrapher results with your watch before it ships, even sends you photos of the watches they have available if you ask them. That alone tells you everything about how they operate. Can't recommend them enough for their high standards of customer service.

💪 HIGH TIER — Highly recommended with minor caveats

Cronos — Seriously underrated. Has its own factory under the Lugyou umbrella which gives it a consistency advantage over pure assembler brands. Their Submariner, Tudor Black Bay 36 and Datejust homages punch well above their price point in finishing. Not as regulated out of the box as San Martin but the bones are excellent. One of the better kept secrets in this space.

Watchdives — The go-to brand for VH31 meca-quartz done right. Their Speedmaster and Daytona-inspired pieces are genuinely well executed for the price, and the VH31 movement gives you a smooth sweeping seconds hand that makes quartz feel premium. Also does solid automatics. If you're getting someone into watches under $100 and above these price points, this is where you send them.

Baltany — Consistently excellent at their price point. Clean field watch and pilot watch designs that don't shout "homage" at you. One of the few Chinese brands building original-feeling pieces rather than copies. Thoroughly enjoy their take on the explorer. Growing reputation for good reason.

Geya — Founded in 1993 so this isn't a new operation. Best known in enthusiast circles for their planetary flywheel complications and AP Royal Oak homages with bracelet finishing that embarrasses brands twice the price. If you want a conversation piece under $200, Geya delivers. Dial and case work on their hero models is genuinely impressive. Their watches are mostly geared to bigger wrist sizes so there's limited options to those with smaller wrists.

⚖️ MID TIER — Good for specific use cases, not all-rounders

Addiesdive — The BGW9 lume brand. If you want the best lume glow in a Chinese diver at budget prices, this is your answer and the community knows it. Design language is basic and the cursive logo isn't winning any awards, but function over form is the whole point here. Solid entry point for dive watch lovers and those who want to get into watches with a very considerate budget. Their Submariner homages are bang for the buck, if you are very budget conscious.

Specht & Söhne — Interesting brand doing integrated bracelet designs that look more expensive than they are. QC is inconsistent, some pieces are excellent, some have fit and finish issues straight out of the box. I've had experiences sending some items back to them given the inconsistent QC in their bracelets. The good ones are genuinely good though especially their Nautilus homage. Check reviews on the specific model before buying.

Militado — Military and field watch territory, with strong Sinn homage designs. If you like the tool watch aesthetic without the tool watch price, Militado serves that niche well. Under-discussed brand that deserves more attention I would say.

Pagani Design — The entry point brand that introduced thousands of people to Chinese watches and deserves credit for that. Best at the lowest end of their range, under $80 their specs are genuinely hard to beat. As prices creep up, better options exist. QC is a lottery: some pieces are perfect, some have bezel alignment issues, loose crowns, or lume problems. Budget for that reality going in. Think of it as a gateway drug, not a destination.

Corgeut — Part of the same Guangzhou manufacturing group as Tandorio, Bliger, and Parnis. Decent entry-level pieces with no real brand identity to speak of. Fine for beaters and modding projects I guess. Not a brand you grow attached to.

Tandorio — Same family as Corgeut with a slightly sharper execution. Their 62MAS and Willard homages are genuinely solid value. The GMT variant with NH34 is a good deal if you want a proper GMT function without spending San Martin money. They did a well executed Engineer homage as well but the lack of half-links makes it more challenging to get a nice fit. All in all, straps are the weak link across the range.

Starking — Reliable, anonymous, and but I would say forgettable in the best possible way. Decent automatics, nothing that makes you look twice. Good starter brand to have. They did a nice well made Legend Diver homage, but the case size is arguably well catered for bigger wrists only. Easy to recommend, then move on from.

Shanghai Watch Factory — The anomaly on this list. Absurdly cheap hand-wound mechanical pieces that feel like freshly made vintage watches. I love a good Shanghai and own one which I use for casual, no brainer hand wound watch that I could wear with a nice leather strap sip a coffee and enjoy the day. Not technically impressive. Weirdly charming. Worth buying once, just for the experience.

Carnival / I&W — A bit more personality than the generic mid-tier brands. Known for colorful, creative dials at accessible prices. Not taken seriously by hardcore enthusiasts but the actual watches are more enjoyable than their reputation suggests. As usual, they do a lot of larger sized watches which I think they can change to cater to more people.

📉 LOW TIER — Know what you're buying

Ciloa — Exists. Does the job at a basic level. They do a lot of chronograph style watches and a llt of BREW inspired clomages. No real reason to choose it over better options at similar prices unless a specific model catches your eye like the Retro Chronograph Look of the Brew Metric Collection.

Poedagar — Fashion watch territory. Dress-watch aesthetics, cheapest budget execution. Not the main audience for this sub.

SKMEI — The Casio G-Shock clone factory. Digital, quartz, occasionally solar. If you need a $10 beater for the gym that tells time reliably, SKMEI. That's the whole pitch. Probably cool to do mods with if you don't wanna do it with your G-Shock. (I saw at a post they might be selling some Royal Pop clomages)

SANDA — Same lane as SKMEI. Digital sport watches at floor prices. Honest about what they are.

Sinobi — Budget fashion watches with slim profiles and minimalist dials. Not offensive, not interesting.

Come at me. Wrong rankings, missed brands, underrated gems I haven't found yet, all welcome. I've been back in this hobby less than a year and I'm already a changed man financially 😂. If you've got a brand that deserves a spot on this list, drop it below, just know I came here on my own free will and whatever happens to my wallet next is entirely on me.

u/TheWatchEdit — 11 days ago

My wrist is more committed to this relationship than I am 🤣

People say you shouldn't let material things define you. My wrist literally has a different skin colour where the watch sits.

I didn't choose the watch life. The watch life chose me. Branded me. Permanently.

Send help! And maybe SPF 50.

Jokes aside. What’s becoming a favorite watch of yours to wear these days? Help a friend here. I can’t bear not seeing a watch on the wrist so please be nice.👍🏼

u/TheWatchEdit — 10 days ago