A. Lange & Sohne 115.021 Features


Ref. No. :115.021
Movement :Manual winding
Case Material :Yellow gold
Bracelet Material :Crocodile skin
Condition :0 (unworn)
:New
:With Box
:With Papers
Location :United States, New York, New York City
Price : price on request
Availability
Available immediately
Caliber
Movement :Manual winding
Movement/Caliber :Lange Caliber L901.2
Power Reserve (h) :72 h
No. of Jewels :53
Frequency :21,600 vph A/h
Case
Case Material :Yellow gold
Case Diameter :41.9 mm
Thickness :11 mm
Waterproof :30 m
Glass :Sapphire Glass
Dial numerals :Roman numerals
Bracelet
Bracelet Material :Crocodile skin
Bracelet Color :Brown
Clasp :Buckle
Buckle Material :Yellow gold
Functions :Date
Others :Display Back, Small Seconds, Guilloche Dial, Power Reserve Display
We will arrange the delivery of A. Lange & Sohne 115.021 replica as soon as your payment is confirmed. Please make sure that your telephone number and email address are right, because the customer service representatives will contact you and identify your information, in order to deal with the shipments of your order. Generally, we deliver products through EMS, DHL, UPS, etc. And the tracking number will be sent to you via email once the watch is shipped. The shipping fee of any order over $300 is free. The package will be arrived about 7 to 15 days. We accept payment by PayPal, Visa/Master card, Western Union and Bank Transfer. If you pay by Western Union or Bank Transfer, we can offer you 15% off. If you have any questions about shipping and payment, please contact us freely, we'll be glad to help you!
A. Lange & Sohne 115.021 The Related Reviews:
- Very practical watch
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[Rating:(5 / 5 stars)] - Review by shatea brisbon Suisse Geneve from Netherlands Purmerend
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[Rating:(3.5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Patricia A Fischer USA Meadville from Netherlands Purmerend
- Thank you! fast service, very efficient, AAA+++
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[Rating:(3.5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Nomada Art Thailand Ratchaburi Province from Netherlands Purmerend
A. Lange & Sohne 115.021 wrist watches news:
Being new to watch collecting, I wanted to ask if there is a special tool that one uses to open the back case of a Hamilton watch. I've tried to use one of those tiny bladed screwdrivers that one uses to tighten the screws on eyeglasses. But have not been successful.also, is there a special "spot" on the watch case that one should use to open the watch so as not to scratch the case or bezel?thanksMark
I took one of my recent purchases, an Elgin automatic, to a watchmaker for an estimate to service it, and it was running very slow. Well, he said it needed a new mainspring and would cost $165 to overhaul. I thanked him for his time and retrieved my watch.I was a little disappointed, because when I got it back the stem wasn't installed properly and came out when I gently pulled it. Well, I figured out how to get the stem back in (I think - it wasn't threaded and kind of popped on with an audible click).Here's the dilemma - it seems to be keeping much better time since he took it apart and inspected it. If it's still keeping good time in a day or so should I go back and offer to pay him something for his time? If him playing with it got it running right what would you do?
I know most 'normal' people buy watches, but that's boring! Trading goods for goods is the oldest sort of economic transaction, and I plan on keeping that alive!I haven't done much 'trading', but there is one watch I remember.When I was in elementary school there was a kid in a grade above me that had the most bada** watch ever, it was a batman quartz that glowed in the dark and would light up if you pressed a button on the side. I so wanted that thing you couldn't believe Eventually I worked out a deal with him, 4 moonpies. The school had outlawed selling 'junk food' in the cafeteria so I had to smuggle them in. We did the deal and I was the proud owner of the most awesome watch a 6 (7?) year old had ever seen.Of course, a few weeks later it failed it's trial by water, oh well.So what are some of your stories? And what are the most popular things traded for watches? Gold? Silver? Antiques?
If I buy a watch in either France or Switzerland while traveling, how do the taxes work? VAT refund? Is there a price advantage? How about import duties upon returning to the US? Thanks is advance.
I am just curious how other people's Rolex's run. I have a DateJust 41 that runs -2.0 second per day and a submariner that rune +1.0 per day. The accuracy Rolex does is amazing. That said, it seems like when there is even slight deviation it is usually to the fast side.This is not a complaint... + or - 2 seconds a day is AMAZING. I am just curious how other people's run. Of my mechanical watches every one runs just a hair fast except the new DateJust I got last week. That goes for Omegas too that all run +2.0 to +3.0.Do your Rolexes run a hair fast or slow?








