this post was submitted on 25 Oct 2023
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Even ultra-luxury manufactures like ALS don't do this, and they do pretty much everything that's conceivable. It actually is possible to complete via machining but watchmakers generally do not (iirc there are a few examples but none come to mind immediately).
At this point I honestly think it's partly tradition. The movement is expected to be perfect and that's where a lot of the labor cost goes in high end watches. Adding $30k to an APRO to have a guy scrape tiny flakes of the screw off over a few days would be a bit silly. I can see why it bothers you though, which is why AP went with the hexagonal center-aligned bolts. The problem is that you can't really do that on every side of the case or you'd never get it apart again (or together in the first place) as the bolt needs a nut on the inside.
Thanks. I actually bought an ALS over the AP Royal Oak because of those screws. They're just such a big part of the design and when it's not aligned in the back it's really jarring
I understand for the screws in the movement and how difficult aligning all of those would be though. However, I still think once you get to the super ultra level of these brands (I'm using $150k but it could be $250k or whatever) then even these screws should be aligned.
Thanks so much for your posts. Very informative
Nobody aligns real screws at any price point. It simply isn't possible to do so and still tension parts correctly.
The $600,000 hand made 1 still doesn't have aligned screw heads, even through each screw is hand made for the watch.