Jump to content

Cost of a Rolex etc


Recommended Posts

Part of the price is definitely the brand name, but Rolex does use higher quality materials, higher tolerances in making the watch and still hand finish a lot of the parts, and that does add a lot of cost to the watch.

There are 2 types of expensive watches.

1) High end brand, Rolex, Longines, Patek Philippe etc. These brands a lot of the price is the workmanship

2) Fashion brand watch. These are watches branded with a high end fashion name. The Fashion house may design the watch case but almost always buy in the movement. Usually the movement will be of reasonable quality, but its not uncommon to find a watch that sells for $500 to only have a movement that sells wholesale for $50 in it. This type of watch you are paying to wear the name not the quality of the watch.

 

But if you want to see what goes into making the real top end brands go watch the videos by Roger Smith on Youtube and you will understand why his watches are so expensive.

https://www.youtube.com/user/rwsmithwatches/videos

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think part of what customers pay, goes to fund the traditional ongoing research that Rolex has historically been and is at the forefront of ever since the early days of its inception. 

There is also some polletical clout behind the brand, hard to find a wrist of sheikh something ben something else that is not advertising the brand.

A lot of folks including me, don,t really know more than what I read about the technical advancement at Rolex and the quality I feel holding a Rolex piece. 

I wonder what the market's worth of the brand itself is. Just today I see an advert showing a pic of Rolex, opened the page only to watch fashion clothing.

Whatever it is that Rolex has done and is doing,  it sure is working. Ticking the kid and the successful businessman in us. 

Other brand need introduction, Rolex introduces us.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, stevew said:

Always wondered how much it actually costs to make a Rolex or any other Expensive Brand. I know you pay Thousands for such Watches, but in Reality i wonder how much was to be built?

Look at the cost of a new movement or a movement of comparable quality, cost is probably 30-50% of that.  Add a bit for dial, case and strap.  Add on the weight cost of precious metals if any.  The rest is fashion which is polite way of putting it.    A few hundred dollars, sans gold, is my guess, maybe a bit more as I'm just guessing at the case/band/dial cost.

 

Edited by measuretwice
Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 hours ago, stevew said:

Always wondered how much it actually costs to make a Rolex or any other Expensive Brand. I know you pay Thousands for such Watches, but in Reality i wonder how much was to be built?

I'd say it is maybe 10% - 20% of the selling price. than add in distribution, operational, development, advertising and all other costs and that gap quickly narrows.   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, swisschronic said:

an okay quality watch that was made with precision is always a pleasure to wear in my opinion. like a 1 dollar sapphire crystal is still a sapphire crystal right? be sure to spend the extra 35 cents for a cyclops that magnifies 2.5 times though.. :)

quality aside.  a fake is a fake no matter how well it is made.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Famous painters might paint a water colour in 4 hours. 50cents paper and paints. worth a fortune. Go figure.

I heard a story about Picasso who used to sign table cloths in restaurants after entertaining a large group and never got billed. He also said he could buy a house if he painted something....

Sure there is clever marketing in watches, but I don't think the inherent value is actually in the materials...perhaps its something else less tangible.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I've remained silent on this thread, and at the risk of upsetting everyone, the thing that worries me the most the the apparent absence of Mark. The moderators do a great job and the members also pitch in, and the site seems to run itself, but it is a concern for the future of this forum when the owner is absent for all intents and purposes. Like many of the comments above I would hate to log in one day and things be closed down as I rely on this site for ideas and knowledge and also cheer me up. maybe the Moderators could reach out to him, assuming he does not read this thread, and express our concerns and let us know the plans going forward? some kind of WRT ark
    • That was the exact reason for me starting this thread watchie. Still we haven't worked out how the regulars are going to hook up if it goes tits up. I honestly think something should be arranged to stay in contact, we all help each other so much. 
    • Yeah ive watched that a few times before,  i couldnt find my old school dividers to scribe it up 😅 Yep thats the guy i bought a roll from . Thanks Nicklesilver that answers that perfectly and more or less what i thought an experiment over time would prove . The jumper arm is quite thick along its length, i left it that way intentionally, i thought the original was probably very thin, i didnt see that it was already missing. Setting isn't particularly stiff as such just positive, i still need to take it out and polish where it mates with the stem release. 
    • Yes, "Sold out" is difficult to understand. There doesn't seem to be a lot going on. It's been nine months since any new video was published on the Watch Repair Channel. The Level 4 course on watchfix.com has been in progress for what feels like forever (several years!?). Maybe Mark's enterprises aren't doing well or perhaps already so profitable there's nothing much to motivate him for more material. Or, perhaps these days he's more into crochet. The real reason is probably something entirely different but it would be nice/interesting to know. I don't mean to sound gloomy or pessimistic, but I wouldn't be surprised to be met by an HTTP 404. Every day feels like a gift. Speaking of watchfix.com I've been postponing the "Level 5: Servicing Chronograph Watches" course for a very, very long time. Anyway, I just enrolled on it so it's going to be very interesting to see the videos. I must say, IMO there's nothing really that can compete with Mark's courses when it comes to presentation and video quality. It's simply world-class and makes me associate with some really expensive BBC productions.
    • Steel has some funny properties, or at least counterintuitive. The modulus of elasticity is effectively (not exactly, but close enough) the same for steel that is annealed and hardened. What changes is the point of plastic deformation* . If the movement of your spring doesn't pass that, it should work fine. It looks a little thick, I would thin it a bit maybe from the main body out about halfway, maybe 10-20% thinner (not in thickness, along its form). But if it works it works!   *So- if you have two bars of the same steel, one annealed, one at 600 Vickers (general hardness watch arbors might be), clamp them to a table so the same length is hanging out, and put a weight on the ends, they will bend the same amount. But if you continue to add weight, then remove it, at a point the annealed bar won't return to its original straightness. That's the point of plastic deformation. But up to that point, as springs, they are the same. However- their wear characteristics will be very very different. And getting the hardened bar past its point of plastic deformation takes a lot more effort.
×
×
  • Create New...