> Bravo, Rob. I thought I was the lone voice crying in the wilderness in support of watches.
>My "beater" is an Omega Seamaster that goes everywhere and does everything all the time. My others tend to sit in their rocker boxes and seldom get worn. This was a very interesting thread. I have worn a watch for the last 50+ years and feel that something is missing without one. Even though my professional activities (to say nothing of hobby pursuits) mean I have to take it off from time to time I won't be without one. Looking at the time of a mobile phone or computer just isn't the same and you can't trust wall clocks you have no control over. There's nothing like the gesture of pushing up a sleeve to see it or the ability to glance at it surreptitiously during boring meetings :-) My current quotidian timepiece is a Longines quartz with an analog dial and a date window. It keeps very accurate time and the crystal is remarkably scratch resistant. I have a Forbes nixie watch too for appropriately nerdy occasions and an assortment of cheapies for travel. I was in the amazing clock museum in the Beijing Forbidden City recently. Has anyone else seen that? It houses an incredible collection of 18th and 19th century extreme high end clocks, from the collections of successive emperors. They are of course all mechanical ( or water powered) and some are of amazing complexity. One had a little automaton of a man sitting at a desk writing down the time! I also saw my first Congreve clock while I was over there. I am tempted to try and make a version of one if I ever get a year or three to spare... Cheers, Morris _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.