The largest independent, non-commercial, consumer-oriented resource on the Internet for owners, collectors and enthusiasts of fine wristwatches. Online since 1998. | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
Including a photo of the piece you are talking about ALWAYS helps! You can learn how to post a photo here: How To Include Photos In Your Postings. 'For sale' postings, commercial solicitation and ads are not allowed. Links to Internet auctions are acceptable only if their purpose is to question the authenticity of a product or provide new clues for identifying counterfeit products. Links that appear to be 'shills' promoting the sale of counterfeit products will be deleted. Links to websites of sellers of counterfeit items are not permitted -- we know they are out there and do not need to be encouraging them by sending traffic to their sites. Privacy, additional policies and administrivia are covered in the Terms of Use.
: Looks great to me if the hands are silver and
: not black. The color and alignment could be
: off because of parallax in the skew picture
: angle. Compare it to a picture at
: www.omega.ch. The crown might concern me. If
: a 'good deal' was >$500 and there were a
: lot of bidders, then you should feel
: somewhat confident.
But the "notches" on the bezel are wrong, the high part of the notch should align with the numbers, unless of course the watch has been repaired incorrectly or had a non OEM bezel change, beware the movement though, there are some very convincing fakes out there including engraving the movement with the correct logos etc, best way to tell is the "finish" on the movement, I havent seen a fake yet that can come close to the genuine Omega movement finishing.
Best regards David
Chronocentric and zOwie site design and contents (c) Copyright 1998-2005, Derek Ziglar; Copyright 2005-2008, Jeffrey M. Stein. All rights reserved. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the terms of use. | CONTACT | TERMS OF USE | TRANSLATE |