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4 Watch Deals Worth Your Time This Week!
1. Duxot Tiburon Meca-Quartz Chronograph — Eclipse Black #DX-2062-33 - Product name: Duxot Tiburon Meca-Quartz Chronograph in Eclipse Black - Store: Long Island Watch (authorized US retailer) - Original price: $240 - Sale price: $149 - Discount: 38% off (no code needed) - Why it's a good deal: Duxot delivers impressive specs for a microbrand — meca-quartz chronograph with the sweep of a mechanical and quartz reliability. Sapphire crystal (anti-reflective), 42mm case, genuine stainless steel bracelet. At $149, you're getting mid-tier specs at entry-level pricing. Long Island Watch is a highly trusted US retailer with full warranty. - Link: https://longislandwatch.com/duxot-tiburon-meca-quartz-chronograph-in-eclipse-black-dx-2062-33/ 2. Caravelle Sea Hunter Automatic — Blue Dial #43B178 - Product name: Caravelle Sea Hunter Automatic Watch with Blue Dial - Store: Long Island Watch - Original price: $375 - Sale price: $300 - Discount: 20% off (no code needed) - Why it's a good deal: Caravelle (a Bulova sub-brand) equipped the Sea Hunter with a Miyota 8215 automatic movement — a workhorse Japanese caliber with hand-winding and hacking. 39mm stainless steel case and that crisp blue dial give it classic diver proportions. At $300 for a legitimate automatic from a recognized brand, this is strong value. - Link: https://longislandwatch.com/caravelle-sea-hunter-automatic-watch-with-blue-dial-43b178/ 3. Seiko Prospex Speedtimer Solar Chronograph — Grey Dial #SSB455 - Product name: Seiko Essentials Sport Chronograph with Grey Dial - Store: Long Island Watch - Original price: $415 - Sale price: $332 - Discount: 20% off (no code needed) - Why it's a good deal: The SSB455 runs Seiko's reliable 8T63 quartz chronograph with sapphire crystal — a combo that usually costs more. 40mm case, stainless bracelet, and that monochrome grey dial punches above its price. Seiko is the community's gold standard for value, and this model rarely sees discounts.
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Why Join Watch Lover Premium?
I’ve stacked so much value into Watch Lover Premium that I think it’s a no-brainer YES decision to join. https://www.skool.com/watch-lover/plans The details: - Monthly Q&A "Inner Circle Mastermind" LIVE Calls with Antonio & Expert Guests - Access To 7+ Micro-Courses Designed To Level Up Your Watch Game - Monthly Challenge & Prize Eligibility - Discount Codes at your favorite watch retailers (Save big $$$ buying watches!) - As a Patron the "activity" requirement doesn't apply to you (you won't get kicked out for just lurking) - Personal Watch Concierge - expert consultant helps find your dream watch ($1000 value) - Personal Sales Concierge - expert helps sell your watch for top dollar ($1000 value) - Invite To LIVE Event (Dallas, TX Oct 2026) Click here to join us https://www.skool.com/watch-lover/plans
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Is this watch too big?
I got this watch a little while ago cause it wasn’t too expensive and I liked the look of it. I have small wrists, and so I worry it’s a little too big. What do you guys think?
Is this watch too big?
Where to get a Citizen watch repaired
I hace a Citizen Eco 700 series that I can't set properly and a it's driving me crazy. My regular watch guy doesn't want to work on it. Who do you guys use?
Buy things which are meaningful
Here's a small idea that changed how I think about value — and it has almost nothing to do with watches. I saw a post here about a fashion watch quite similar to a Cartier Tank - and I commented with something along the line of "With all due respect, this is a fashion watch. It will be dead in three years". And I wanted to explain the concept a bit more. A "homage" is not a bad thing, if you like the shape and need to know the time. But "functional" and "worth it" have not the same implication. Here's the part most people miss. When you spend $50–100 on a disposable fashion watch, you're not just spending that money. You're spending it instead of something else. And for the same outlay, you could often buy a genuine vintage mechanical watch — a piece someone engineered decades ago, that can be repaired, kept, and passed on. One is built to end up in a landfill. The other is a small piece of heritage you can wear every day. That's opportunity cost, and once you see it you can't unsee it. The cheap option isn't "affordable" at all. It's the most expensive thing you can buy — because what it really costs you is the better thing you could have had for the same money. It's the same logic as fast fashion. The $15 shirt was never really $15; someone, somewhere, pays the difference. Disposable goods always carry a hidden cost — and people are growing tired of owning things with no substance, no story, and no life beyond a season. It applies far beyond watches. The cheapest option, chosen again and again, is often the most expensive path of all. Buy fewer things. Buy things that last. Buy things with a story. What's something you stopped buying cheap — and never regretted?
Buy things which are meaningful
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