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Comment by hellbannedguy

5 years ago

It's still there, but certainly died down after the invention of quartz time keeping.

My hope is consumers start demanding the availability of parts when buying a high end watch though.

It's a good feeling knowing you can repair that hunk of metal on your wrist, with interest, and a fair amount of study.

(There was a guy in the Navy whos boat was torpedoed by the Japanese during WW2. He, and rest of the crew were stuck on a deserted island. One by one the sailors watches were breaking down. Since he was a Watchmaker in life, he took over repair. At first it was difficult. He then got creative and made small screwdrivers, and even made a lathe. Anyhoo--I thought that was neat. A guy fixing jeweled watches with tools he made himself in that enviornment. I saw the article years ago, but haven't been able to find it again.)

>It's a good feeling knowing you can repair that hunk of metal on your wrist, with interest, and a fair amount of study.

That... goes for everything, software included. But watches being something of a Veblen good [1], wouldn't availability of parts just make consumers realize that actually this $700 watch is practically no different from that $70 watch? They wouldn't want to sell parts for that reason, I think.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veblen_good