Bremont Tour
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gregs656

Original Poster:

12,039 posts

202 months

Friday 24th December 2021
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I did the Bremont tour on Wednesday with my brother. It is excellent, we were there for about 3 hours.

Kicked off with tea or coffee and a general watch chat with Tom, our host who has recently come out of the luxury watch trade.

Then a brief introduction video, a walk through of how watches work and the various inventions in time keeping that came out of the UK - I think this can be as detailed as you like, he certainly knew his stuff.

Then a tour of the manufacturing facility, the various special projects they have under taken and the watch manufacturing and servicing areas.

No hard sell, there is a chance to try things on (I tried on the Longitude and a few others) and you can buy there if you want to (the guy prior to us bought a Longitude).

We both thoroughly enjoyed it. It’s £25 a person and the money goes to charity.


blingybongy

4,057 posts

167 months

Friday 24th December 2021
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Sounds scintillating and only 25 quid as well.

Mutley78

124 posts

77 months

Sunday 26th December 2021
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I’ve also been on the tour and can confirm it’s fantastic. If, like me, you prefer the substance of manufacturing over the marketing guff it’s just the thing and really impressive.

Deckert

646 posts

211 months

Tuesday 28th December 2021
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Thanks for letting me know about this, it sounds great and have just booked on.

gregs656

Original Poster:

12,039 posts

202 months

Saturday 1st January 2022
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Deckert said:
Thanks for letting me know about this, it sounds great and have just booked on.
When are you going?

Let us know what you think of it.


Gue55work

54 posts

78 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
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Went for this tour today. On the whole it is a very good tour and well worth the £25 admission. What I would say is that the actual manufacturing operation at The Wing is relatively small with only a limited number of machines. It was still interesting to see how the components are produced though. There was very little in the way of hand work going on so don’t expect to see rooms full of “artisans” hand finishing movements, it’s not that kind of operation yet.
It was nice to see that the company seem to be taking the whole ethos of bringing as much of the process in house very seriously, but it is obviously a very gradual process for a company of their size.
Had the chance to look at watches with the opportunity to buy at the end.

Crumpet

4,934 posts

201 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
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Do they happen to divulge how much of their watches are actually made in England?

I guess there’s no 60% rule in the UK like in Switzerland so they can do what they want to some degree, but if they could tell me that 99% of their watches were fully fabricated and assembled in England they’d probably get a sale from me.

I find it quite disappointing that large amounts of the parts of premium Swiss watches are made in China (or Asia as a whole).

gregs656

Original Poster:

12,039 posts

202 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
quotequote all
Crumpet said:
Do they happen to divulge how much of their watches are actually made in England?

I guess there’s no 60% rule in the UK like in Switzerland so they can do what they want to some degree, but if they could tell me that 99% of their watches were fully fabricated and assembled in England they’d probably get a sale from me.

I find it quite disappointing that large amounts of the parts of premium Swiss watches are made in China (or Asia as a whole).
They are very honest about this. I think because they got a lot of blowback from the Wright Flyer.

55% of the weight of the ENG series movement is manufactured in the UK (which is the base plates and bridges, basically) and the rotor is modified in the UK. The cases are made in the UK.

Also, for the new movement, the calibration is done in the UK.

Plus of course, the vast, vast majority of their watches are swiss movements at the moment.

It's a slow burn for sure.

The Swiss rule is liberally interpreted.

Gue55work

54 posts

78 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
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As above. They appeared to very clear about what was made in the U.K. They didn’t have any option as it was all there in front us. They said they try and source as much as possible from within the U.K. in terms of components and finishing (rhodium plating is done in Switzerland) but for obvious reasons that has is limits. Vast majority, if not all, of the manufacturing and assembly/service staff were from the U.K.
They seemed to make a point of saying they could have done things better in the past and are obviously still very aware of the very negative impact the whole “in house” fall-out had.

Crumpet

4,934 posts

201 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
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Thanks, that’s interesting. And I guess those ‘Swiss’ movements they’re using aren’t 100% Swiss either. Isn’t their law something like 60% by finished value? As opposed to 60% by weight? I guess, given the low cost of producing things in China, that the bulk of a Swiss movement could be Chinese? Or am I being cynical and unfair on the Swiss watch industry?

Still, I like that they’re being open and honest about where things are produced. Which is more than can be said for the Swiss!

Edited by Crumpet on Wednesday 12th January 21:32

gregs656

Original Poster:

12,039 posts

202 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
quotequote all
Crumpet said:
Thanks, that’s interesting. And I guess those ‘Swiss’ movements they’re using aren’t 100% Swiss either. Isn’t their law something like 60% by finished value? As opposed to 60% by weight? I guess, given the low cost of producing things in China, that the bulk of a Swiss movement could be Chinese? Or am I being cynical and unfair on the Swiss watch industry?

Still, I like that they’re being open and honest about where things are produced. Which is more than can be said for the Swiss!

Edited by Crumpet on Wednesday 12th January 21:32
Correct, by value. I don’t think you’re being unfair.

Seeing all the cases being made and the polishing etc is very cool.

I can see an S302 or something in my life. The 40mm cases wore nicely on me.

It sounds like you’d enjoy the tour.

Crumpet

4,934 posts

201 months

Wednesday 12th January 2022
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Yeah I can see me picking one up at some point, it’s just the retail pricing and the second hand values that are an issue - they’re so far apart! I really do like their watches, though.