So, I came across an auction and found this: The seller does not seem to know whether it is original, or whether the parts are still original. The movement looks like from AS 2063 family used by Blancpain for their early Fifty Fathoms but lacks of date co...
So, do you also think the "BLANCPAIN" on the pendulum is not "factory"-grade? Like the whole movement is a vanilla AS 2062 and then someone engrave "BLANCPAIN" "RAYVILLE S.A." "25 Jewels" by himself on it?
...and maybe Blancpain movement were actually that crude. There appears to be zero attempts at finishing the movement but maybe that was their style then.
If you are talking about the logo on the dial, I think you are right since vintage models (70s-80s according to the case shape and dial) did not use that serif font. Also, in this newer, serif version of the logo, the letters "B" and "N" should be printed...
There is one guy on WatchUSeek that says if this is a genuine Blancpain. However, this is not the modern Blancpain (in Le Brassus). Instead, this watch is from the old Blancpain (in Villeret - hence the "Rayville"). Now I really want to know how much "Ray...
Unfortunately, I don't have any clearer, zoomed-in image that shows the print quality on the dial. I had tried to ask the seller but he simply reposted the same image but cropped lol.
Typically when a deal sounds too good to be true, it generally isn’t true. In this case at face value it may seem all ok but the dial and hands are (in my humble view) definitely not ok. 500 bucks is not much, but too much to throw away.
In fact, the last bid on the auction for this watch is ~USD 104 (IDR 1.500.000). There is "Buy It Now" option for ~USD 173 (IDR 2.500.000). The auction will be closed in 5 hours. For this kind of quality (that we can only perceive visually) is this still ...