
This is one of the key problems in the world of watches. What is the difference? and which one is better? These questions will be answered in this article, so read and find out the answers to your questions.
Quartz watches hung a mechanical watch in close submission in the late 1970s and 80s. Since Hamilton created the first electric watch, the Ventura, in the late 1950s, a battery or revolution of quartz changed the way people watched time. Before a quartz clock, it was part of everyday life, to reset the clock using a TV or radio, the accuracy of quartz measurements and the durability of the charge made this little routine a thing of the past. Quartz movements are so ingrained in the daily lives of people that automatic watches almost become a distant memory. Brands such as Omega, Tissot and Oris tried to compete with Japanese and American manufacturers of Quartz watches such as Casio and Timex, but in the late 90s and in the 00th Swiss watch companies fought off the quartz revolution. Swiss watch companies create luxury watches, quality watches that are desirable and desirable for everyone who sees them.
But what about watches, what's the difference between cheap quartz watches and Swiss automatic diving watches? For example, what is the difference between a Timex Expedition diver and Oris Pro Diver, apart from the obvious price difference of £ 2,200? They both offer the wearer the same basic functions of immersion on the surface, but is there even more that makes an automatic watch much more expensive? Here are some key differences between an automatic watch and a quartz watch.
- Timex Expedition Diver timeout will be more accurate than Oris Pro Diver within 1 month. The reason for this is that Timex watches use battery power to charge a capacitor, which then regulates the movement of the watch when a movement is used as an automatic watch to charge the spring, which emits energy to the movement of the watch. High quality automatic movement of watches has an error of + or - 1 second per day compared with a variation of quartz watches, which is less than 1 second per year. It must be the same thing?
- Oris watches use Swiss engineering to produce each movement manually, and each movement is checked for quality before it can be sent to retailers and sold to the general public. Timex is a machine produced in a factory in China, and is checked for one second in every 100 units.
- All Swiss manufacturers, such as Oris, use a unique serial number that identifies watches and allows them to track all watches to the point of sale and production. Companies such as Timex and Casio do not provide unique serial numbers due to the mass quantities that each item is created daily.
- Automatic watches require maintenance only 3-5 years. Quartz watches need a new battery every 2-5 years, depending on the use of its functions.
- Automatic watches stop and require manual resetting if left from the wrist for more than 40 hours. The quartz watches will continue to operate until the battery fails or mechanical failure occurs.
- On mechanical watches there are minimal gadgets. There will be no built-in dive computer or dive registration setup, these functions can be found at such quartz watch companies as Casio, Citizen and Tissot, which have the ability to record data from your dives for later use.
The main thing to think about is whether this diver's watch will be a functional addition to the existing diving kit to give you data for diving without having to buy a dive computer? If so, the digital watch will give out most of the information about it on the digital display, the watch for men is like the Sea Touch and the master Citizen Pro.
Or is this watch more than just diving, if this diver’s watch is timeless and can be worn outside of diving? If yes, then this question is well suited for watch collections, and it is a great status symbol, as well as a useful diving kit.

