Franck Muller King Conquistador 10000K SC

Franck Muller King Conquistador 10000K SC Watches

[Brand] :Replica Franck Muller

[Series]:Franck Muller Replica King Conquistador

[Model]:10000K SC

[Gender]:Gents

[case]:Steel

[Dial]:Black Arabic

[Movement]:Automatic

[Bracelet]:Steel

[Crystal]:Sapphire

[Size]:45mm

Now:$239.00

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  • Franck Muller King Conquistador 10000K SC Description

Franck Muller Watches are designed on the idea of "Fashion, Luxury, Elegant."
Great Franck Muller Replica King Conquistador series have very attractive looks that comes with outstanding quality.
The combination combination of appearance and performance.
Luxury Gents watch makes you look more modish, sporty and successful in person.
Buy replica watches with high brand name recognition at reasonable prices.
The unique model number of the watch is 10000K SC.
This preeminent watch is powered by a fine Swiss Automatic movement.
Quality replica watch is crafted from sturdy materials and classy designs
Steel case has harmonious design and looks very fascinating.
Good watch highlight your style and taste.
Steelband gives you perfect visual experience.
Quality replica watch is crafted from sturdy materials and classy designs.
The watch is very readable with the Dial.
This watches help you Keep up with the newest trend of fashion.
Scratch resistant Sapphire Crystal is durable and has a eye-catching look.
Case Diameter: 45mm
Good water proof and dust proof function.
Notice: Please notice that you'd better not take the watch to swim or bath, although it has water proof function. Keeping the watch away from water is a good way to prolong its working life!

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  • New 2008 Citizen Promaster Diver watches: Eco-Drive + Atomic Accuracy
  • There seems to be a constant feature ballet involving Citizen, Seiko, and Casio. The dance involves elegantly weaving in an increasing amount of technology into watches while making them look appealing at the same time. For a while Casio was prevailing in the feature category, but most of the watches succeed in looking "cool and techy" at best. No self-respecting watch lover would display their plastic endowed Casio G-Shock or Pathfinder in a meeting, or on a date. Over time Citizen and Seiko began to incorporate some technologies that made Casio watches so desirable, and likewise, Casio began to take styling cues advice from their Japanese brethren.

  • Thoughts On The Confrerie Horlogere La Clef du Temps Tourbillon Watch
  • CH laclef temps watch

    I have been pondering how I should think about this watch for a while. I want to like it, and a big part of me does. Another part of me questions the wisdom of the watch. Is it wearable? Does it makes sense? Would you be considered akin to an alien from outer space for wearing one? The watch is a new piece from the Confrerie Horlogere, a watch making arm of the popular watch movement maker BNB Concept (that is about the declare bankruptcy). The model is the La Clef du Temps Tourbillon, and there will only be 24 of them ever made. Apparently one for each timezone. One of these watches was auctioned off in the Only Watch 2009 watch auction in September for well over $200,000 which was close to its retail price. As a limited edition of just 24 pieces, the watch can justify itself. Still, I feel the need to evaluate it as though they were going to me 24,000 of them.

    One this that strikes me as being... well curious to say that least, is that this isn't the only watch that has this movement. A movement that I should is, is as strange as the Replica watches. Why? Well, because it has that ability to slow down and speed up the clock. Where did you hear about this before? Well it was in the Horus Ultramarinum. Horus of course got their movements from BNB Concept. The only difference is that the  La Clef du Temps watch orients the tourbillon horizontally to stick out through that side window. More of a trick with gears (albeit complex) than it being a new movement. Confrerie Horlogere says that the watch dial is meant to look like a human head or skull. It does, and I can't help but think that the dial and movement look like brass brains. Which in fact is precisely what the image is meant to represent. Perhaps in the future where this watch may fit in, we will be mere brains in mechanical bodies.

    C H laclef watch

    The case is large at 53mm wide and 58mm tall. Almost too massive to wear, but not quite. Wear the watch around and frighted children a bit if you please. The case is made from mostly titanium, and obviously sculpted in a less than ordinary manner. The large image at the lower part of the case around the face is the logo for the Confrerie Horlogere - the shield with an arrow through it. Is that supposed to represent breaking through one's defenses? Or maybe defying conventions? The case is, interesting to say the least. It is art, pure and simple. Nothing functional about it - the watch is an artistic message. You can't deny art as being art - you can try to deny a watch being a Replica watches. This item does tell the time, it does strap to your wrist, and it does have a mechanical movement. Still, my brain is having a hard time adjusting to the idea that what I am looking at is a watch.

    I am not so much a fan of the strap. Sure it is unique, and very different, but that doesn't mean it is good. The rubber straps reminds me of scrunchies, or those elastic hair bands that women use when putting their hair in a pony tail. Um... and some men too. It just sorta looks like something you'd buy at a kiosk in a mall. Not particularly luxurious or even pleasant looking. I am trying to imagine it over a wrist. Maybe when I see the thing eventually in person my feelings will change. And while I do have a great amount of respect for the Confrerie Horlegere and the Le Clef du Temps, The bracelet just doesn't meld with my individual notion of good looks.

    laclef dial

    Many people are going to claim that the style of the dial is too different than the style of the case. That is true, but it is also sort of the point. Really depends on who you see wearing the Replica watchesI suppose. You wouldn't think twice if an alien from "Mars Attacks" was wearing it (then again you'd be running in fear." Though if your father walked into the room wearing this Replica watches, you'd probably point and chuckle.

    I don't feel as though the hands and dials on the face do the intricate look of the movement surface justice. The fine "brain patterning" doesn't seem to mesh well with thin green hands. I just think the hands could have been done better. They feel like an after thought. On the dial you will find a few functions. A watch face, a retrograde seconds indicator at about 4 o'clock, a power reserve indicator at about 8 o'clock, and a indicator for how fast the Replica watchesis running (fast, normal, slow). Another odd thing about the dials are how the numerals are printed. They are mirrored. Like the two hemispheres of the brain? Maybe. Who knows. This concept is interesting in theory, but I personally wouldn't have left it in the design. But then again, I have to keep reminding myself that this is art dammit! Not just a watch.  So who am I to criticize?

    If you look at the lower side of the case you can see the tourbillon cage spinning around. The placement makes sense because as your wrist rests, your can have a nice view of the tourbillon at all times. This is done well. The crown on the right of the watch is used for adjusting the time, and the crown on the left is used to adjust the speed of the time. Mathias Buttet,  founder of the Confrerie Horlogere came up with this idea. He wanted to give people the luxury of speeding up dull moments in life, while slowing down good moments. Who can deny that this is a sweet and pleasant ideal. The concept of symbolically doing this is appealing, but is it $200,000 - $300,000 appealing? Buttet seems to explain that only the ultra wealthy should be able to afford "the luxury of time." Reading this I just smirk, because no matter how much money you have, you can't buy time, or spend it for that matter. That is something equally distributed for all of us. Now if the watch could actually speed up and slow down time... we are talking about a good use of a few hundred thousand bucks.


  • Bear Grylls Sticks With Casio: Wears G-Shock In Current Man Vs. Wild Season
  • Pardon if you don't care for such things as pointing out what watches people in films and on TV are wearing. Some people are vividly obsessed with game of  "watch spotting." And when I dedicate to watching a show, I am pretty keen on spotting what timepieces people are wearing. Being a fan of survival shows (total guilty pleasure), I've noticed what Les Stroud wore in Survivorman, and what Bear Grylls has been wearing over the past several seasons of Man vs. Wild (on the Discovery Channel). As many fans of the watch know, Bear started with higher-end watches such as a Breitling Emergency and then a Bremont and started to get more reasonable with the watches he beats up. The last two watches he was wearing have been Casios. These of course make great choices given their operation and value (not to mention durability), but I have a feeling Casio is helping him out by providing suitable watches for his tasks. Not that there is anything wrong with this. I think it is good to display suitable gear that is affordable to most of the show's viewers, and if a watch deserves to be in a show like this, it is a Casio.

    As nature survival series go, Man vs. Wild is pretty entertaining. I often want the show to be longer, showing more detailed elements of survival in harsh areas of the world without relying on most of the "tools of civilization" we rely on. I've also been getting into another survival show called Apocalypse Man (on the History Channel). This show is similar in concept, but sort of the reverse. The guy here wears a Nike digital watch I am pretty sure, but at the end of the show in the credits, there is a clear message thanking Casio. Maybe the crew has them. Apocalypse man is all about a guy trying to survive in a post apocalyptic world. He is in cities, but they are totally devoid of people. So he has to scavenge and build things - it is pretty cool. Sad and sort of humorous is that the cities he is in that are all ghost town are probably in Louisiana (post Katrina) and in Michigan. What the shows have in common aside from the survivalist slant, is that they are both "looking for other people." Bear is looking to get rescued while the Apocalypse man is just looking for other (friendly) humans. I do recommend it if you get a chance to see it. That of course goes for both shows.

    Looks like Bear has a penchant for analog hand watches. His Casio Dynamic Wave Ceptor watch was analog, and so is this replica casio watches G-Shock AWG101-1A watch (aka AWG101 or AWG-101). While each of these watches has analog hands, they also have LCD screens for other information. I'd say that most Casio Replica watches are all digital. It wasn't easy to pinpoint the exact model on Casio G-Shock watch, so there is a small chance it might be another model - though that is unlikely. At $130 retail, the watch is a good deal (pretty much all Casio watches are). The watch is light powered (Tough Solar as Casio calls it), and atomic clock radio controlled (5 band). This at least means that watch won't need a new battery even if you are out of the range of the atomic clock radio signals.

    The AWG101 also has the usual bevy of G-Shock features from stopwatch, to countdown timer, calendar, 48 city world time, alarm, and LED backlight. By the way, these newer LED backlights are great. Back when I was a kid and had Casio watches, the little light was useful, but anything but bright. Over the last several years the LED backlights Casio puts in the watches pack a mean bright punch. Given the smaller nature of the three reserve tone LCD screens some of these features are on the harder side to use or read, but the watch does perform them all. Move up to more expensive Casio watches and you get more features like fancier chronograph or countdown functions and more alarms.

    I am waiting for the day that we have super tiny power efficient GPS modules in these watches so that higher-end Casio Pathfinder or G-Shock models will automatically tell you sunrise/sunset time and tidal data no matter where you are without having to set the watch. How cool will that be? The implications are almost endless to the new functionality you could have in the watches. You see Bear thrashing the watch around and swimming with it. Being a G-Shock watch with its tough resin shell and 200 meters of water resistance, it can take just about anything. I know that Bear could have opted for a fancier G-Shock model, but I like that is chose a mid range one for his most recent set of adventures.

    See analog hand Casio watches G-Shock watches on eBay here.