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The largest independent, non-commercial, consumer-oriented resource on the Internet for owners, collectors and enthusiasts of fine wristwatches. Online since 1998. | |||||||
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Feel free to discuss pricing and specific dealers. But 'for sale' postings, commercial solicitation and ads are not allowed. Full archive of all messages is accessible through options in the Search and Preferences features. Privacy, policies and administrivia are covered in the Terms of Use.
For the answer to the NUMBER #1 most frequently asked question here--for details or value of a specific older Omega watch you have--go to: Tell Me About My Omega. | Learn more about How To Include Photos and HTML In Your Postings. | To contact someone with a question not relevant to other readers of the forum, please click on their email address and contact them privately. |
: Am I correct in thinking that if you do not
: have a date stamped on your warentee card
: that you could wait until your Omega has a
: problem and then predate the warentee card
: accordingly. From this logic, your warentee
: would extend to 2 years past your first
: problem instead of 2 years after purchase.
You COULD do that, even though it's dishonest. Also, Omega would get suspicious if you sent them a watch that clearly needed a full servicing, yet your warranty card showed the watch to be less than 2 years old. In this case, Omega might try to contact the dealer to verify the actual date of purchase. If that happened, you'd be caught trying to defraud them.
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