TAG Heuer Monaco Calibre 12 blue
TAG Heuer Monaco Calibre 12 blue
Author
Discussion

kingkongsfinger

Original Poster:

255 posts

193 months

Thursday 7th February 2019
quotequote all
Hi All,

Seen this watch in Goldsmiths, MODEL NUMBER: CAW2111.FC6183. I have loved these for a while.

https://www.goldsmiths.co.uk/TAG-Heuer-Monaco-Cali...

I am wondering if the price of £ 4,350.00 is negotable and if so what discount could I expect to receive.

Also is there any where else that people would recomed to buy one from instead?

They also do a "vintage" version for £ 400 more with a black strap which in my eyes does not look as nice, am I missing something here?

Thanks, and sorry for all the questions.


Fallingup

1,732 posts

120 months

Thursday 7th February 2019
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Nice watch. The only trouble with Tag's is their dreadful customer service. Puts me right off I'm afraid. They don't respond to emails. You send a watch to them for repair. They keep it for months with no feed back then send it back still faulty. You send it back to them at your own expense. After a few months they send it back still not repaired saying that the movement parts are no longer available. Will not buy another. I eventually got it fixed at an independent.

Edited by Fallingup on Thursday 7th February 21:16


Edited by Fallingup on Thursday 7th February 21:25

crispian22

977 posts

214 months

Friday 8th February 2019
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I bought my heuer Monaco Steve McQueen edition from Francis and Gaye in Coventry, after some negotiations I came away with it for £3650.00.

AlasdairMc

555 posts

149 months

Friday 8th February 2019
quotequote all
Fallingup said:
Nice watch. The only trouble with Tag's is their dreadful customer service. Puts me right off I'm afraid. They don't respond to emails. You send a watch to them for repair. They keep it for months with no feed back then send it back still faulty. You send it back to them at your own expense. After a few months they send it back still not repaired saying that the movement parts are no longer available. Will not buy another. I eventually got it fixed at an independent.

Edited by Fallingup on Thursday 7th February 21:16


Edited by Fallingup on Thursday 7th February 21:25
I’d agree with that. Two months to repair a sticking rotor, then the same again when the stem came away. This was my wife’s watch - I don’t have a Tag myself.

Dicky Knee

1,090 posts

153 months

Friday 8th February 2019
quotequote all
A quick look at Chrono24 would suggest you could get a decent deal on that watch. I don't know how much Goldsmiths would offer as a discount though.

A call to Dom Hackett would give you a good idea of what to expect.

kingkongsfinger

Original Poster:

255 posts

193 months

Saturday 9th February 2019
quotequote all
Thanks for the feedback so far, worried about the after service now, which in this day and age should be good.

RiggaTheMighty

145 posts

96 months

Tuesday 26th February 2019
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Short story..... don’t buy one.



Long story.....
I would avoid any Modern Tag without an in-house calibre to be fair.
Unless it has an in house movement, it will have a sellita in it, which makes the watch useless.

This model has a sellita sw300-1 in it with a Dubois-Dupraz 2008 chrono module.

Firstly, the sellita movement will have winding issues, both kinetically and manually.
After a year or 2, The winding wheels will break off teeth when winding manually. Whilst the automatic reversers will grind themselves down until the movement is covered in ground steel dust, which will wreck the watch.

Secondly, there aren’t many people who will service these, not even Tag. So when all goes wrong, you are pretty much paying for a replacement movement and module. Which starts the process again.

If you can still find a calibre 17 model, that is the one to get.
ETA 2894-2 movement with the same chrono module from Dubois-Depraz.

Just as a side note, Tag Heuer are my favourite watch brand. So this isn’t a haters post.
I love Tag watches and I have lots of them, but all of them are ETA calibre watches. I would never, nor would I recommend, buying a watch with a Sellita movement in it.
Unfortunately, due to the recent Swatch debacle, more and more brands are struggling to find quality materials with which to use in their watches.






Edited by RiggaTheMighty on Tuesday 26th February 11:05

lostkiwi

4,585 posts

146 months

Tuesday 26th February 2019
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Surely this isn't a Tag issue but far more widespread?
Sinn also use the SW300 for example.

goldieandblackie

258 posts

116 months

Tuesday 26th February 2019
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TheAngryDog

12,802 posts

231 months

Tuesday 26th February 2019
quotequote all
RiggaTheMighty said:
Short story..... don’t buy one.



Long story.....
I would avoid any Modern Tag without an in-house calibre to be fair.
Unless it has an in house movement, it will have a sellita in it, which makes the watch useless.

This model has a sellita sw300-1 in it with a Dubois-Dupraz 2008 chrono module.

Firstly, the sellita movement will have winding issues, both kinetically and manually.
After a year or 2, The winding wheels will break off teeth when winding manually. Whilst the automatic reversers will grind themselves down until the movement is covered in ground steel dust, which will wreck the watch.

Secondly, there aren’t many people who will service these, not even Tag. So when all goes wrong, you are pretty much paying for a replacement movement and module. Which starts the process again.

If you can still find a calibre 17 model, that is the one to get.
ETA 2894-2 movement with the same chrono module from Dubois-Depraz.

Just as a side note, Tag Heuer are my favourite watch brand. So this isn’t a haters post.
I love Tag watches and I have lots of them, but all of them are ETA calibre watches. I would never, nor would I recommend, buying a watch with a Sellita movement in it.
Unfortunately, due to the recent Swatch debacle, more and more brands are struggling to find quality materials with which to use in their watches.
How can you tell what movement is in a watch? I have a Carrera Calibre 5 which comes with either the ETA 2824 or Selita movement.

RiggaTheMighty

145 posts

96 months

Wednesday 27th February 2019
quotequote all
TheAngryDog said:
How can you tell what movement is in a watch? I have a Carrera Calibre 5 which comes with either the ETA 2824 or Selita movement.
The calibre 5 was an ETA several years ago, yes. But now it is a Sellita.
No watch brand that is not part of the Swatch group can now put ETA movements in their watches.
If you have a glass back, you can see the movement details under the balance, if it’s a solid case back, then the only way to know is to ask a watchmaker.
Happy to let you know if you want to message me details.




TheAngryDog

12,802 posts

231 months

Wednesday 27th February 2019
quotequote all
RiggaTheMighty said:
TheAngryDog said:
How can you tell what movement is in a watch? I have a Carrera Calibre 5 which comes with either the ETA 2824 or Selita movement.
The calibre 5 was an ETA several years ago, yes. But now it is a Sellita.
No watch brand that is not part of the Swatch group can now put ETA movements in their watches.
If you have a glass back, you can see the movement details under the balance, if it’s a solid case back, then the only way to know is to ask a watchmaker.
Happy to let you know if you want to message me details.
I've figured it out. It's 26 jewels which suggests Sellita. It's nearly 2 years old and works fine.