Discussion
So I accidentally dropped my 3 month old Sinn from a height of about 3 feet while putting it on, it hit the wooden bedside table and then fell another couple of feet and hit laminate flooring. The watch is visibly unmarked, but the movement is completely dead.
Should I let the retailer have a look at it or should I just send it back to the manufacturer?
Should I let the retailer have a look at it or should I just send it back to the manufacturer?
Olivera said:
So I accidentally dropped my 3 month old Sinn from a height of about 3 feet while putting it on, it hit the wooden bedside table and then fell another couple of feet and hit laminate flooring. The watch is visibly unmarked, but the movement is completely dead.
Should I let the retailer have a look at it or should I just send it back to the manufacturer?
I know it’s dishonest but I’d just go with the “it just stopped working” approach. They may just fix it if they can’t prove it was dropped. Should I let the retailer have a look at it or should I just send it back to the manufacturer?
Anyway, I’ve always just gone back to the retailer / AD for these things as I just find it easier for someone else to sort it all out.
Olivera said:
Thanks for the replies, I'll probably send it back to Sinn. Quite dissapointed that it's completely f
ked from dropping it just a few feet onto some wood/laminate. 
Think of it another way, would you whack it with a baseball bat at the same speed?
ked from dropping it just a few feet onto some wood/laminate. 
Crumpet said:
I know it’s dishonest but I’d just go with the “it just stopped working” approach. They may just fix it if they can’t prove it was dropped.
Anyway, I’ve always just gone back to the retailer / AD for these things as I just find it easier for someone else to sort it all out.
That’s really poor form in my opinion. Anyway, I’ve always just gone back to the retailer / AD for these things as I just find it easier for someone else to sort it all out.
Pflanzgarten said:
Crumpet said:
I know it’s dishonest but I’d just go with the “it just stopped working” approach. They may just fix it if they can’t prove it was dropped.
Anyway, I’ve always just gone back to the retailer / AD for these things as I just find it easier for someone else to sort it all out.
That’s really poor form in my opinion. Anyway, I’ve always just gone back to the retailer / AD for these things as I just find it easier for someone else to sort it all out.
Clearly if they ask you ‘have you dropped it?’ then it’s a bit different but I certainly wouldn’t lead with ‘I dropped it’.
Nigel_O said:
Surely they'll know when they open it up that it has been dropped. If you've been dishonest and told them that "it just stopped working", they would be within their rights to refuse to repair it.
If you tell them the truth, they'll probably go straight to the issue and fix it quickly
Point taken, but is it unreasonable to expect that a brand new hardened/utilitarian chronograph Sinn should be able to survive a 2 or 3 feet fall onto wood without completely breaking?If you tell them the truth, they'll probably go straight to the issue and fix it quickly
Olivera said:
Point taken, but is it unreasonable to expect that a brand new hardened/utilitarian chronograph Sinn should be able to survive a 2 or 3 feet fall onto wood without completely breaking?
How do you know that? Sinn make plenty of non-hardened watches, with normal automatic movements that would be equally as knackered in any other manufacturer's case if dropped badly.If it was me, and from the information in the original post about it being 'unmarked' externally I'd go back to the original retailer, especially if it's a local bricks and mortar AD.
I'd plead ignorance, and say it's just stopped working.
Especially as the warranty might not be a lot of use.

I'd plead ignorance, and say it's just stopped working.
Especially as the warranty might not be a lot of use.

Sinn website said:
Warranty claims are excluded in the event of damage caused by.
Improper use
Repairs or attempted repairs which were not carried out by us or our authorised partners. A list of authorised partners can be found in the Sales and Service Partners menu on our website www.sinn.de.
Signs of wear and tear, especially to straps
The use of force (blows, knocks, impact)
Which model it is might help your case if you go 'honest', if it's a roughty toughty diving watch you might try the 'fit for purpose' route, not as helpful if it's a dress watch. Improper use
Repairs or attempted repairs which were not carried out by us or our authorised partners. A list of authorised partners can be found in the Sales and Service Partners menu on our website www.sinn.de.
Signs of wear and tear, especially to straps
The use of force (blows, knocks, impact)

HocusPocus said:
OP has admitted accidental damage and not manufacturing defect as the cause, so why put it dishonestly on the AD or manufacturer with some flase claim it lacked merchantable quality?
Pay for the repair and claim it on your household all risks AD cover.
Because it shouldn’t break and stop working from a 3 foot fall. It just shouldn’t. And no amount of arguing this with the manufacturer will likely convince them to fix it under warranty after you told them you dropped it, because 3’ could be 20’ for all they know. Pay for the repair and claim it on your household all risks AD cover.
If it was from an unreasonable height and obvious that I’d broken it then I’d have some integrity and pay for the repair. But I don’t think in this case being economical with the truth is unreasonable.
Drop any mechanical watch from 3ft on to a hard surface and you risk it breaking, no matter who the manufacturer is. With a drop from that height you either get lucky or you don’t.
If the watch is unmarked then the case is obviously reasonably robust as it should be, but protecting the movement from shock is another matter and not easily done.
If the watch is unmarked then the case is obviously reasonably robust as it should be, but protecting the movement from shock is another matter and not easily done.
Edited by benny.c on Tuesday 12th July 23:24
Crumpet said:
HocusPocus said:
OP has admitted accidental damage and not manufacturing defect as the cause, so why put it dishonestly on the AD or manufacturer with some flase claim it lacked merchantable quality?
Pay for the repair and claim it on your household all risks AD cover.
Because it shouldn’t break and stop working from a 3 foot fall. It just shouldn’t. And no amount of arguing this with the manufacturer will likely convince them to fix it under warranty after you told them you dropped it, because 3’ could be 20’ for all they know. Pay for the repair and claim it on your household all risks AD cover.
If it was from an unreasonable height and obvious that I’d broken it then I’d have some integrity and pay for the repair. But I don’t think in this case being economical with the truth is unreasonable.
You appear to use a sliding scale for integrity. When does design/manufacturing responsibility get overtaken by klutz handling? At 3 foot 6 inches, and do you give an extra inch if it is a dive watch? Why not have a matrix for each make and model factoring in age too?
Using your integrity matrix, we can also all claim crash damage against car dealers/OEMs whenever impact speed is less than 20mph, but 30mph for Porsche because everyone expects them to go and stop faster. Your approach makes the blame game a tad complicated.

benny.c said:
Drop any mechanical watch from 3ft on to a hard surface and you risk it breaking, no matter who the manufacturer is. With a drop from that height you either get lucky or you don’t.
If the watch is unmarked then the case is obviously reasonably robust as it should be, but protecting the movement from shock is another matter and not easily done.
This, and Sinn don't make the movement, they buy them from Selitta so attributing any sort of blame on Sinn is a bit like ranting about Lotus because the engine in your Elise shat itself.If the watch is unmarked then the case is obviously reasonably robust as it should be, but protecting the movement from shock is another matter and not easily done.
Edited by benny.c on Tuesday 12th July 23:24
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