Cartier Tank Features


Ref. No. :Tank
Movement :Manual winding
Case Material :Yellow gold
Bracelet Material :Leather
Year :70's
Condition :1 (mint)
Location :France, Paris
Price : € 3,800 (= $ 4,636)
Availability
Available immediately
Caliber
Movement :Manual winding
Case
Case Material :Yellow gold
Bracelet
Bracelet Material :Leather
We will arrange the delivery of Cartier Tank 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!
Cartier Tank The Related Reviews:
- This watch really fantastic, thank you !
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[Rating:(5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Ryan Thompson Switzerland Ebikon from Netherlands Purmerend
- I purchased this watch for my 16 year old. I was , heavy, and detailed, but not gaudy. It was perfect and exactly like it was described. I would recommend the watch.
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[Rating:(3.5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Victoria J Germany Rheine from Netherlands Purmerend
- very fast shipping! nice watch! good seller! thanks!!
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[Rating:(3.5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Gino Marino USA Owings Mills from Netherlands Purmerend
Cartier Tank wrist watches news:
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Picked this up a few days ago, and spent most of the afternoon trying to fit a stubborn square crystal and sizing the stem and replacing a broken winding gear.It is hard to see in the pictures, but it has a beautiful weave pattern dial. The square 761 Elgins, imho, were some of the classiest looking models of the production run.The crystal number if you need it
Why is the number 4 on Roman style dials written as IIII?That question I was recently asked by one of our retailers in the Middle East.Frankly speaking, I was taken aback as I had never contemplated the why but just carried on what my grand-father had done.So, I started diving into the topic in more detail and noted that on most watch dials following the Roman way of numbering the number 4 is written as IIII. The correct way would be IV, however.I then started asking some of my fellow watch manufacturers and mind you no-one could come up with an answer. It seemed as if we all just had not paid any attention to the why.When I started looking at some more dials, I noted that the first four numbers (I, II, III, IIII) are composed of dashes only, the next four (the middle ones so to speak) contain a "V" (V, VI, VII, VIII) and the last four digits are composed using an "X" IX, X, XI, XII). This hold true for watches having no date window. Could this harmony lay at the base of the peculiar s
Within the last month, I have sold off all my chronographs. I never use the functions and the mechanicals tend to be thicker than I like.Now I'm wondering if my collection is somehow incomplete.The most complicated watch I owns is a VJ 7751, which I consider a moonphase/pointer date, not a chrono.Everything else is a variant of your basic three-hand (2824), 2834, 2892.Is this odd? Or does it come under the heading:No accounting for taste?
Searched around but couldn't find a similar thread. So all you fortunate people with you platty AP's, show us some of your best pics!Just to be clear I am no way in a position to buy one of these in the near future, hopefully for my 50 I'll be able to treat my self to one! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk








