Obviously bored with using his watch solely for the purpose of keeping time, this young chap decides to study what effects if any would result from placing his watch in the microwave. Judging from the state of said microwave, it looks like the watch isn’t the first thing he’s tried to cook. Needless to say, this isn’t something you should try at home… Read the rest of this entry »
You will notice on the Watch Superstar site that there are both designer watches and chronographs available. Some may never have heard of a chronograph and others may just be confused as to how one differs from a normal watch. This handy guide should set you straight.
A chronograph is a timepiece that has both timekeeping and stopwatch functions. The term chronograph is often confused with the term chronometer which in some cases describes a watch that has received some kind of precision certificate. Chronographs come in the following forms:
Analogue chronograph - these display both time and stopwatch functions using their analogue hands. Usually the centre hand will be used for the stopwatch function with subdials indicating seconds, tenth seconds, etc.
Digital chronograph - predictably, this uses a digital readout for both timekeeping and stopwatch functions. This will either use 2 separate displays, or one display whose mode can be selected.
Analogue/Digital chronograph - this chronograph consists of a standard analogue watch with a smaller inbuild digital display being used for the stopwatch function.
Double chronograph -this is a watch that has not one but two stopwatch mechanisms so that it can estimate separate events of different durations.
Flyback chronograph - this is often confused with a double chronograph. This is a watch that has a single button to stop, reset and restart the chronograph function of the watch.
Your watch should be cleaned and maintained at least every 2 years.
When not being worn, keep your watch stored in a cool dry place.
Remove your watch if you are undertaking heavy/physical work.
Avoid abrasions as scratches may eventually affect the case and bracelet.
Ensure the crown which is used to change the time and date should be properly pushed in at all times. This will prevent penetration by water and dust.
Keep your watch clean with a soft dry cloth.
Quartz watches should be meticulously cleaned as even the smallest particle can result in damage.
When the watch battery runs out, change it immediately as this can affect the movement.
When changing the time or date, never do it within 3 hours either side of midnight. At this time the watch’s regular date change is being carried out internally and should not be interferred with.
Immediately get your watch serviced if there is moisture inside the crystal.
Remove your watch for hot showers, baths, saunas, heavy or physical work as any moisture will damage the inner workings as well as wear down the strap.
Diving watches need regular servicing, despite their rigorous water resistance.
Don’t unnecessarily subject your watch to pressure or heat.
Any watch should be rinsed under fresh water after exposure to salt water.
Your watch should always be returned to an official authorized dealer for servicing or any other necessary repairs.
In what is quite a coup for Watch Superstar, we are able to bring you an awesome offer of a big name brand watch. The Nautica Yachtimer is designed as a sporty watch ideal for those that spend a lot of time on the water. This highly sophisticated timepiece consists of a brushed stainless steel case, a polyurethene strap and a 10 minute adjustable counter with chronograph and alarm.
This cool designer watch would usually set you back £325 but for a limited time only, you luck watch superstar faithful can pick this little gem up for a credit crunch busting £162! We have no idea how long this offer will last, but better be safe than sorry! Click here to take a closer look.
A watch auction at Christie’s International yesterday landed 15.1 million Swiss francs, beating their rivals Sotherbys who failed to hit their target. One watch, a Patek Philippe with a calendar that automatically adjusts to leap years, sold for $1.8 million! Not bad in these times of economic and financial crisis…not bad at all.
Sotherbys pulled in 3.75 million francs at an auction in the same city on May 10th, they estimated they would pull in around 3.8 million, a mere 50,000 francs short of their target. Pocket change.
If you’ve got an old watch lying about the place it’s probably about time you got it valued, you could be holding onto something truly special.
The Patek Philippe sale at the Christie’s international auction was good enough to sneak into our most expensive watches list.
Just for a change from the usual watch reviews, here are some fun and games involving magic tricks with watches!
Derren Brown changes the time on a man’s watch then helps him to ‘guess’ what time it has been changed to! But even the mighty Mr. Brown doesn’t get it right all the time…
David Blaine changes the time on some poor guy’s watch without even touching it!
This one is very cool - some guy uses his crazy pickpocketing skills to STEAL George Bush’s watch as he greets the crowds. How he doesn’t notice is beyond me. There’s no sound in this clip…but it’s the pictures that you need to keep your eye on!
Now this one is just creepy - magician Paul Zenon SLOWS DOWN a guys watch, at the same time slowing down his pulse!
Having an expensive watch is an age old status symbol. Not content with simply having a a time keeper strapped to his arm, mankind has strived to make the most complicated mechanical wonders designed to make jaws drop. Complications, (additional extras to you and me) are the curreny of the high class watch, the more it has, the better it is. If you want to tread the route of the gentlemans collectors watch expect to spend well in excess of $200,000. Until you’ve pulled in that kind of money you might as well stick with your trusty casio.
The Chopard Super Ice Cube
Forget the endless, needless and confusing world of complications and spend your hard earned monies on the Chopard Super Ice Cube for that special lady in your life. The vital statistics: 66.16 carats of diamonds which includes 1,897 brilliants, 288 trapeze-cuts, and a center case set with 16 squares. No matter how much money this thing costs, it’s still ugly. Ugly and over a million dollars, a combination rarely seen.
$1,130,620
The Blancpain 1735
The 1735 has half-a-dozen complications, two more than a watch needs to qualify as a “grand complication”. It has an ultra-slim, 42 mm platinum case, a perpetual calendar (meaning it never gets the date wrong), a split-second chronograph, a minute repeater, a tourbillon and a moon phase minder. It takes steady Swiss hands eight-to-ten months to piece together all 740 components and only 18 out of a limited run of 30 watches have been assembled to date. Click on the images below to get a real good look inside this $1,000,000 masterpiece.
$1,000,000
The Vacheron Constantin minute repeater
Vacheron Constantin started making watches in 1755 which gains them the title of oldest watch manufacturer in the world. In over 250 years in the watch-making game Vacheron Constantin have ammassed only 15 boutiques worldwide that sell their product. The plain vanilla faced minute repeater has a mesmerising mechanism that will chime back the time to you as and when you please. Housed in a 18K gold case the minute repeater was designed by Vacheron Constantin for Napoleon to help the tiny man to tell the time on the battlefield without getting shot. A minute repeater is a mechanical device that chimes out the time with two different bell sounds, so that at the pull of a lever you can hear exactly what time it is. All that history for the walk away price of $340,000! If you’re still not convinced that the mechanical wonder of a minute repeater is worth it then take a look at it in action.
$340,000
Audemars Piguet Tourbillon Minute Repeater
Considering the money you’d need to spend to get you hands on this piece of surgical engineering, it’s a mighty ugly watch. It looks like something you can pick up on the nightmarkets of Far East Asia but under the hood lie more complications than you’ll know what to do with. It comes with a tourbillon, a device invented in 1795 by French watchmaker Abraham-Louis Breguet to counter the effect gravity has on your watch as it moves around on your wrist. It’s a negates the effects of gravity on your time telling mechanism within a tiny confined space yet somehow it was invented 200 years ago by a Frenchman?
Oh, not only does it have a tourbillon, it also has a minute repeater, so even if you were to climb Everest you could still tell the time perfectly without having to look at it. The minute repeater flexes it’s tiny mechanical muscles in the video below.
$297,500
Breguet double tourbillon
This watch qualifies as a “grande complication” - namely because it’s needlessly complicated. Mankind was born with two kidneys and it’s well known we can get by just fine with just one. Tourbillons are similar to kidneys and yet here, echoing the mystery of mankind, we see a watch sporting two of the complicated little numbers. They work independently of each other and hand over the task of running the watch to the other tourbillon every 12 hours like a miniture mechanical relay marathon. Not only does this watch hit the tourbillon market for all it’s worth, it also has a 44mm platinum case with front and back sapphire crystals and 540 moving parts. Your laptop has less moving parts than that, and this is just a watch, and it’s only $329,000.
$329,000
Girard-Perregaux Opera One
This platinum timepiece has an alligator band, enough to get the activists backs up straight off the bat, and features a Westminster minute repeater and tourbillon with three gold bridges.
Unlike your standard run of the mill minute repeaters, the Girard-Perregaux’s Opera One sounds passing hours not with a stanard bell sound but a real life tune. $495,000 is all you’ll need to be allowed within arms length of this watch, failing that you can always just look at our nice picture..
$495,000
Grande Complication Blancpain
If Tom Cruise, Tommy Hilfiger, Gilette and Ralph Lauren had a love child, that thing (whatever it might be) would wear this watch. It costs a small fortune but for your dollar you get a minute repeater, a split-second chronograph, a tourbillon, a perpetual calendar, an automatic winding mechanism and if you’re into your astronomy it can even tell you how our lunar friend is doing in his monthly cycle. If you saved $2 every day it would only take you 1000 years to get your hands on this beauty.
$730,000
Vacheron Constantin Tour de l’Ile
Its that oldest of old watch manufacturer again. Vacheron Constantin claim this is the most complicated watch in the world, and because of that fact they only decided to put the time in to make seven of them. It’s estimated that the Tour de l’Ile took 10,000 man hours to make including the research and development needed to allow a watch this complicated to even exist. It has a list of sixteen complications including a minute repeater, sunset time, perpetual calendar, second time zone, a tourbillon device, the equation of time and the representation of the night sky, second time zone, moon phases, age of the moon, a celestial chart, and a 58 hour power reserve. If it’s bells and whistles you like, this is the watch for you. With only seven of them ever being made the price of these rare birds is going up and up with some estimations sitting at around the $6,000,000 mark. If you’d jumped the queue when they first were announced you might well have got one much cheaper.
$1,500,000
The most expensive watch ever bought
The most expensive watch ever made was the result of a long lasting feud between two American financiers. During a time when most of the United States didn’t have two sticks to rub together the two businessmen, New York financier Henry Graves Jr. and Ohio automobile engineer James Ward Packard, duked it out in a game of “who can have the most ridiculous watch”. Packard commissioned 13 complicated watches from Patek Philippe between 1900 and 1927 with complications including a perpetual calendar with phases and age of the moon, indication of sunrise and sunset, and a celestial chart depicting the constellations of stars in the sky over Packard’s home in Ohio.
Graves Jr. wasn’t going to roll over that easily, over a similar time period he comissioned complicated watched from the same guy who probably couldn’t believe his luck. To have two businessmen throwing money at you in the hope that you eventually roll over and say “this is as complicated as it gets” is surely a stroll up dream street for watch manufacturers.
The process eventually ended with a watch comissioned by Graves Jr. that boasted 24 complications. It took three years to design and five years to produce. The 24 carrat gold time piece was finished in 1933, had a different horological function for each hour of the day and included a chart of the night sky over Graves’ home in New York.
Triumphant in his victory, Graves died in 1953 leaving the watch to people lucky enough to be written into his will who sold the watch to the Time Museum in Rockford, Illinois. In 1999 the museum closed and their collection of watches was sold off at a Sotheby’s auction. With a pre-sale estimate of $3 million, the Graves watch eventually sold for $11,003,500 to an anonymous collector.
That’s around half a million dollars for every complication in the watch and whoever bought it will be lucky enough to know how bright it is at the home of its original owner.
There are 10 types of people in this world: those who understand binary and those who don’t. If you found that joke funny, then you’ll go mad for this minimalist looking watch. The top row denotes hours and the bottom row minutes and by the time you’ve worked out what time it is, it’ll already be 15 minutes later. Useless.
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2, Thumbnail Watch
Frustratingly, this spectacularlooking timepiece is a mere concept that was designed as part of a competition organized by Timex.
The thought process behind it is that it can be turned on and off by pressing down on the ‘nail’. The colour can also be changed by touching the surface. There are two problems with this watch: how on earth is it going to be powered and will you need to buy a full set of matching fingernail watches? Surely you would end up looking like some sort of LED edward scissorhands…
3, Barcode Watch
This watch is certainly a futuristic looking piece of kit and it appears almost as tricky to use as the Binary Watch. The first 2 columns indicate hours with the second 2 indicating minutes. Your guess is as good as mine as to what the time is in this picture, but if you run it past the barcode scanner at the checkout I think it will register as a tin of baked beans. Or soup - I’m not too sure.
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4, Camera Phone Watch
This really shouldn’t be called a ‘Camera Phone Watch’ as it’s clearly more of a ‘holy crap I wan’t that!’ sort of a watch. It would probably be quicker to list all this things this little beauty from Korean company Telson can’t do, so here we go: do the dishes, mow the lawn.
So if you’re looking for a 256 colour LCD screen voice recognition camera phone watch that can’t do the washing up, or cut your lawn then you know where to look. For those of you who prefer their watches to come with a build in lawnmower, you’re best looking elsewhere I’m afraid.
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5, Tokyo Flash Watch
Somehow managing to look both like an old piece of equipment you’d find in a science lab and a submarine radar at the same time, the Tokyo Flash Watch is a rather attractive little number.
The Tokyo Flash range combines stylish design with a unique LED display for each of it’s watches, seeming as it does to hold style and function in equally high regard.
It might be one of the most accurate and famous clocks in the world but there’s no getting round the fact that it just ain’t going to fit on your wrist. Not without some considerable pain, anyway. And you’d probably go deaf the first time it went off.
2, Cuckoo Clock
Again, it’s going to be a struggle to fit this on the old wrist – but it’s a more realistic option than Big Ben. The only downside with this charming timepiece is that the little bird that pops out on the hour will no doubt have your eye out. So it’s best that you use it along with some form of protective eyewear.
3, Atomic Clock
You’d never have to worry about your watch running fast or slow with this one. Atomic clocks are THE most accurate clocks around, using as they do an atomic resonance frequency standard as their timekeeping element. Which any idiot knows. The downside is that unfortunately all atomic clocks come with their own suspiciously hairstyled scientist. If you are averse to hanging out with such people (people with mullets, not scientists – they’re cool) then we suggest you go for more practical wristwear.
4, Grandfather Clock
If you prefer your timepieces with a more classic, rustic look then the good old grandfather clock is the ‘watch’ for you. Make sure you get Grandad’s permission before gaffer taping it to your wrist first, though.
5, Sundial
Possibly the most ridiculous item on this list for the simple reason that you can only use it when the sun is out…..and you need to stand still all day….and it weighs a ton….in fact all of these timepieces are completely useless as watches. If you’re after something more practical and stylish then why not check out a much more sensible selection of designer watches.
Steven Stamkos - Young Ice Hockey Star and NHL First Overall Draft Pick
In a world where precision and timing are key, Steven Stamkos, the rising ice hockey star certainly knows the importance of a split second. As of today, he will have no problem with his timing as he has signed an official agreement with the Swiss watchmaking brand Tissot to become the company’s first Canadian male sporting ambassador. Tissot, which has been the Official Timekeeper of the IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships since 1996, has partnered with this young, successful and dynamic Canadian sports personality throughout his quest in reaching his professional goals. Tissot will also be launching a special Steven Stamkos limited edition timepiece bearing his number “91”.
For Tissot, Steven Stamkos fits perfectly with the brand’s values of innovation, quest for performance and stretching oneself to the limits as hard work and willingness are just two of the strengths in Stamkos’ personality. His work ethic is exceptional; he’s grounded, and very mature. On the ice, Stamkos has an obvious sense of what he needs to accomplish. He has explosive speed, and is a natural goal scorer who owns an extraordinary wrist shot with a quick release. Off the ice, the young center displays maturity beyond his years. He’s a well-rounded individual and his dynamism and charisma make him a perfect ambassador for Tissot.
Within the three year contract, signed with Tissot President, Mr François Thiébaud, Steven Stamkos agrees to represent the brand on and off the ice. His image will also soon be gracing the windows of Tissot official retail outlets in Canada, the United States and around the world.
2009 will see the launch of a dedicated limited edition Steven Stamkos watch with Ice Hockey design details and the distinctive number “91” engraved on the back.
“We are delighted to welcome Steven into our global Tissot family” said François Thiébaud. “Steven represents the future of our brand as he is ambitious, has a fighting spirit and at the same time is firmly attached to traditional values. We believe that he will be a real asset to our brand and an example to many young people around the world and we are sure that he will become one of the stars of the sport in the future.”