With the TPD, I put mine on the minimum and waited to see what happend. They all stopped eventually so I then increased the time on each one until I got it right. I Have a Dukwin nine watch winder and so far am very happy with it.
I bought one of their 8 watch winders for my perpetual watch collection and it won't even power on. I pushed the buttons it is plugged in but nothing happening- rip off.
No, just no. The amount of time required to install the watch is huge, too huge. Unscrew the cap, squeeze, pull, open the clasp, put the watch on, close the clasp, align, push, screw in, set the parameters, turn on... In this period I could manually wind the watch and set the time. All for free.
What if you have 30 expensive watches and 8 are perpetual calendar watches and travel for work a lot? I should just come home and reset 8 perpetual calendar watches. Another way of looking at it is- If you don't understand the pitfalls of generalizing you should probably avoid criticizing others.
@@Obeijin Well if I did it for all of my watches and reset them it would take me about 10 hours per month. Kind of pointless to have perpetual watches to reset them after every work trip.The reason I have enough money to buy nice watches is because I don't have 10 hours a month to dick around. Can we just agree you over generalized and are wrong or will you argue it? Not all of us have 1 timex that we can wind.
With the TPD, I put mine on the minimum and waited to see what happend. They all stopped eventually so I then increased the time on each one until I got it right. I Have a Dukwin nine watch winder and so far am very happy with it.
I bought one of their 8 watch winders for my perpetual watch collection and it won't even power on. I pushed the buttons it is plugged in but nothing happening- rip off.
I enjoyed the video! It’s a great starter winder
Thank you!
Do you know if it’s an American brand?
I don’t think it’s American but it’s definitely a fine starter winder.
No, just no. The amount of time required to install the watch is huge, too huge. Unscrew the cap, squeeze, pull, open the clasp, put the watch on, close the clasp, align, push, screw in, set the parameters, turn on... In this period I could manually wind the watch and set the time. All for free.
That’s true. Manually winding is always an option.
Getting paid much?
Nope. It’s my honest opinion.
"Only 90$"? You may find an analog twice cheaper
How is it only 80$?Because it’s crap that’s why.
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Believe whatever you want. It’s really not though. It made me rethink my decision on buying my winder. Sounds like it’s not for you.
@@TheTimekeeper correct👍
If you can't wind your own watch , you shouldn't be allowed in public ...
Isn’t that a little excessive?
@@TheTimekeeper Maybe just a little .
How much effort does it take to wind a watch ? And 60 seconds of your time ?
What if you have 30 expensive watches and 8 are perpetual calendar watches and travel for work a lot? I should just come home and reset 8 perpetual calendar watches. Another way of looking at it is- If you don't understand the pitfalls of generalizing you should probably avoid criticizing others.
@@Obeijin Well if I did it for all of my watches and reset them it would take me about 10 hours per month. Kind of pointless to have perpetual watches to reset them after every work trip.The reason I have enough money to buy nice watches is because I don't have 10 hours a month to dick around. Can we just agree you over generalized and are wrong or will you argue it? Not all of us have 1 timex that we can wind.