|  | Home   Bulova Men's 98A106 Marine Star Automatic Two-Tone Stainless Steel Watch | |
|  | |  | | | Bulova Men's 98A106 Marine Star Automatic Two-Tone Stainless Steel Watch | | | | | SKU:
| | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1-2 business days | | Only 2 left in stock, order soon! | | | | | | In 1875, a young Czech immigrant named Joseph Bulova set up shop in New York City, and a legendary American watch brand was born. Bulova was trained as a jeweler, and his expertise carried over into his watchmaking career, which began around 1911 with boudoir clocks and pocket watches, and soon evolved to include what was then one of the latest and most fashionable technological innovations: the wristwatch. Bulova introduced its first line of wristwatches in 1919. The company grew and prospered, and soon early radio and television ads were declaring, "America runs on Bulova time." In the 1950s, continuing its legacy of innovation, Bulova introduced Accutron, the first electronic watch, and the first breakthrough in timekeeping technology in over 300 years. The Accutron timing mechanism was later adapted for use by NASA computers and a Bulova timer was even placed on the moon to control transmissions of data. Bulova timepieces have kept official time aboard Air Force One and have also served as official timepieces for U.S. Olympic teams. Today, Bulova maintains its tradition of excellence in technology and design, offering a diverse collection of beautiful precision timepieces for every occasion. | | | |
List Price:
| $499.00 | |
Our Price:
| $325.00 | |
You Save:
| $174.00 (35%)
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| | Product Details | | Product Length: | 4.6 inches | | Product Width: | 3.5 inches | | Product Height: | 3.4 inches | | Product Weight: | 0.65 pounds | | Package Length: | 4.6 inches | | Package Width: | 3.5 inches | | Package Height: | 3.4 inches | | Package Weight: | 0.65 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 3 reviews |
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| | Watch Information | | Crystal Material: | Mineral | | Clasp: | fold-over-clasp | | Case Diameter: | 43 millimeters | | Case Thickness: | 13.8 millimeters | | Case Material: | stainless-steel | | Band Material: | two-tone-stainless-steel | | Bezel Material: | gold-tone-stainless-steel | | Dial Color: | blue | | Movement: | japanese-automatic | | Calendar: | day-and-date | | Water Resistance Depth: | 330 feet |
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| | Features | Quality Japanese Automatic movement; Functions without a battery; Powers automatically with the movement of your armPartial skeleton dial; Gold-tone crown with Bulova insigniaPolished stainless steel case; Polished gold-tone stainless steel bezel; Polished two-tone stainless steel braceletMineral crystal protects dialWater-resistant to 330 feet (100 M)
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| | Used and New |
| All | |
| $179.95 | Used
- Mint | | | $242.99 | New | | | $325.00 | New | | | $344.91 | New | | | $344.91 | New | | | $374.25 | New | | | $374.25 | New | | | $374.25 | New | | | $395.00 | New | |
| New | |
| $242.99 | New | | | $325.00 | New | | | $344.91 | New | | | $344.91 | New | | | $374.25 | New | | | $374.25 | New | | | $374.25 | New | | | $395.00 | New | |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
5 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Bulova Marine Star - A very good value, but not for divers Jun 28, 2010 ORDERING THE PRODUCT: I ordered the Bulova Marine Star mechanical/automatic watch, model 98A106, in two-tone gold and stainless steel with blue face, from Amazon.com on June 14, 2010. It arrived within a few days, in good working order. The small cardboard Bulova watch box contained the watch, a thin instruction book (Bulova Book No. 623), a 1-year limited watch warranty from HSWW Company LLC (also known as "[...]", 545 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY) and a Bulova product tag. Note that the normal Bulova 3-year warranty was not included.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION: This is a mechanical self-winding watch powered by the movement of the wearer. It will stop if not worn and its accuracy is not in the same league as an electronic quartz watch. You will need to reset its time regularly. It appeals mainly to those who are fascinated by mechanisms rather than those seeking convenience (like me). The watch and bracelet are of heavy stainless steel with gold accents, looking and feeling both robust and well made. The clasp is a very secure, smoothly operating double-locking fold-over type that is unlikely to open by accident. From the front, the watch presents a domed mineral crystal under which is a blue face with gold and white luminous tick marks at the hour positions. The gold and white hour and minute hands are also luminous, but the second hand is not. This watch has no day or date function. A numbered, unidirectional (counterclockwise) rotating elapsed time bezel with 60 click-stop positions, similar to many classic divers watches, surrounds the face, with a luminous dot at the zero position, numbers at 10, 20, 30, etc. and tick marks at 5, 15, 25, etc. The luminous markings allowing the watch to be read easily in the dark, even after two hours or so. The face of the watch has a cut-out revealing the spinning balance wheel and ruby bearings of the 21-jewel gold-plated Citizen/Miyota 8N24 skeleton movement underneath. A metal-ringed, transparent screw-down case back shows the rest of the movement and the winding pendulum, which is clearly marked "Bulova, Automatic, Twenty-One, 21 Jewels" While gold plated, clean and attractive to the eye, a jewelers microscope reveals that the movement is not highly polished, as on some Swiss watches. The watch crown is at the 4-O'clock position and is well protected by a substantial ridge at the top and less well protected by a small ridge at the bottom. Surprisingly, the crown is NOT a positive-sealing screw-down type, making this watch unsuitable (in my opinion) for swimming or diving, despite the "100M Water Resist" label on the watch face. The crown has two positions. Pushed in fully, the watch may be wound manually, a nice feature on an automatic watch in this price range. Pulled out, the hours and minutes may be set. But the second had does NOT stop - this is a "non-hacking" movement.
IMPRESSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: I've used this watch for more than two weeks and found it easy to use, comfortable and well made. It gains about 7 sec/day in normal use (Miyota specs the movement at -10 to +30 sec/day) , less when sitting face-up on a table. This compares well to my slightly more expensive Seiko divers watch (7S26 movement, +45 sec/day from the factory, -10 sec/day after adjustment) and even to my Rolex Yachtmaster (just within a COSC certified +6 sec/day). However, both the Seiko and Rolex are much less sensitive to position. The Bulova gains as little as two seconds per day or as much as 8, depending on how it is placed down when not in use and whether it is worn. Neither the Seiko or Rolex vary by more than 2 seconds in similar conditions. Unlike the Seiko and like the Rolex, the Bulova can be manually wound - very handy if you are trading off watches and need to start it up quickly. Fully wound, the watch can run about 40 hours without being worn. Like the Seiko, it is possible to forcibly "hack" the movement to set the precise second by turning the hands backwards slightly and maintaining pressure to halt the seconds hand. But this only works when the watch is barely wound and ceases to work when the watch has more power stored. This is a minor annoyance. In daily use, I reset the minute hand back by one minute whenever the watch hits 30 seconds fast, making it 30 seconds slow. The watch then takes 10 days to catch up and get back to 30 seconds fast again, when I repeat the reset. Overall, the Bulova is well built, attractive and accurate - remarkably so for a mechanical watch in its price range. Two changes would make this watch nearly perfect: 1. A screw-down crown to make it suitable for swimming or diving, and 2. "hack" capability to allow precise setting of the second hand. Because these items are missing, I give the watch 4 rather than 5 stars. Nonetheless, if you are in the market for a well-built, attractive, relatively accurate, value-priced mechanical watch, this one is a good bet.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Good looking self-winding watch at a great price May 02, 2010 I used to own a Bulova Waterproof Self-winding Oceanographer Watch many moons ago-gave me great service for fifteen years. When I first saw this watch it reminded me of my old Bulova. Hope it gives me the same service as my old Bulova. It's a good looking watch at a great price.Let you know in fifteen years if it holds up.
2 of 5 found the following review helpful:
very hansome watch Jan 28, 2010 this watch is truly stuning in person, if ur evering thinking of a bulova automatic go to a store and look at this one in person, at the store its was on sail for 350, here got it for 170, 100% real brand new watch, i had it cheacked out, it looks exatly like the pics, out best looking and prices automatic iv see any where.
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