Richard Mille 523.45.91 Features


Ref. No. :523.45.91
Movement :Automatic
Case Material :Red gold
Bracelet Material :Rubber
Condition :0 (unworn)
:New
:With Box
:With Papers
Location :United States, Pennsylvania, warminster
Price : $ 56,000
Availability
Available immediately
Caliber
Movement :Automatic
Movement/Caliber :RM023
Power Reserve (h) :55 h
Case
Case Material :Red gold
Case Diameter :45 x 37.8 mm
Thickness :11.45 mm
Waterproof :50 m
Dial :Transparent
Bracelet
Bracelet Material :Rubber
Bracelet Color :Black
Buckle Material :Red gold
Functions :Date
Others :Skeletonized, Display Back, Screw-Down Crown
We will arrange the delivery of Richard Mille 523.45.91 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!
Richard Mille 523.45.91 The Related Reviews:
- Is works well, thanks
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[Rating:(5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Eunice l Greece Korydallos from Netherlands Purmerend
- Excellent seller. Everything is OK. Recommendation.
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[Rating:(3.5 / 5 stars)] - Review by jeffrey umana USA Revere from Netherlands Purmerend
- truly great deal, reliable seller, easy purchase
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[Rating:(3.5 / 5 stars)] - Review by Jeff P Switzerland Geneva from Netherlands Purmerend
Richard Mille 523.45.91 wrist watches news:
Had a hard time finding the right bracelet for my Seiko Bullhead chrono. The original fishbone bracelet looked great but just didn't fit right.The fishbone feels thin and flimsy; a little too flexible and doesn't support the weight of the watch head well. Couple that with the fact that I couldn't size the bracelet down enough for my small wrist and the heavy watch ends up flopping around on my wrist like a dying fish.Tried it on a Watchadoo lumpy:Very solid and stable on the wrist, but a little too heavy. While the lumpy style works with the watch better than you may think, it still wasn't right.Finally got some in some shark mesh bracelets that had been held up by the Canadian postal strike.Tried it on a 20mm shark mesh..BINGO!!! We have a winner!Whatta youse guys think?
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As per the title, I'm curious what's the most preferred model of Diver from all the watch buddies over here. The original Steel, the super light Forged Carbon, the mighty Black Ceramic, the audacious Tantalum/Rose gold or the snow White Ceramic. Let's get the poll started and please feel free to state the reason/comment if you have any.
With the 3 day movement, how often do you wind your watch? I'd like to do it every third day...but I know I'll end up forgetting to wind the watch if I don't have a set schedule. So then I was thinking of winding it fully Mon, Wed, Fri which would allow the watch to wind down once a week. Any thoughts on what would be best for the movement and for accuracy?
I was wondering if anyone has any information around grey market/second hand dealers margins what they are and why they are comprised this way?I am based in London and the majority of sellers are looking between 25-30% mark-up from the price they'll purchase a watch at to what they will list the watch for sale at.This seems quite high to me especially with watches which are still under Rolex warranty. I think bar checking authenticity and taking a few photos it seems odd require such a large mark up.I know each dealers will have overheads; staff, premises, employees etc but sometimes I wonder why they don't just list the watch at a lower price (tha most of the market) and take the instant profit rather than sit on them for a while to achieve these margins.Any dealers who could shed some light on this?








