It measures 44mm from 9 to 3, not including the crown or pushers, and around 50mm lug to lug. You can tell from the pictures that this is not a small watch. There are quite some reviews about it, but I will share my opinion as a wearer and owner instead, you can look up at it's technicalities elsewhere, as they will provide more accurate details. So, after a few days I kept thinking about my defy classic skeleton, and I ended up finding a preowned one at a decent price. ![]() Whilst not cheap in any sense, but definitely cheaper than most of the watches with skeletonized in-house movements. So getting one for that kind of money (below 6k USD), is to me - a "bargain". After a few days having it sold, I kind of missed it, it's one of the best watches I have ever owned on that pricepoint, and I especially like skeletonized or open-worked dials. But after a while, since the pandemic, it doesn't get much wrist time anyway, and I received an offer I couldn't refuse for it. ![]() ![]() ![]() Long story short, I bought the defy classic. To be honest, I never fancied one, until the latest defy iteration came out. From the old-age classical looks, to the bizzarre looking Defy Extreme with stars on the bezel. Zenith Defy has long been a wierd line in their production.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |