Whilst quality control on only 60k pieces per year should be better, they will still honor their watch and replace the damaged part(s). Will take time though…
I recently bought a new 5170G from a European authorized dealer (one of the last available). A Patek-trained watchmaker working at Wempe in NYC examined the watch and found some flaws in the factory finish of the watch case—vertical distortions on the sid...
Whilst quality control on only 60k pieces per year should be better, they will still honor their watch and replace the damaged part(s). Will take time though…
Take your watch. Point the flaws. They will send to Geneva. If they approve, they will then solve the issue in whatever way they deem suitable. But it takes time. Get ready to wait
Before you purchased that 5170 you posted pictures of what you said looked like a polished case asking for advice. And I believe you spoke to Patek Geneva about that watch too. Is this the watch you purchased?
So, I took the watch to Henri Stern Agency a week ago. They examined and confirmed the vertical distortions in the case finish. However, they started by insisting such distortions can appear on “one or two out of ten watches” as a by-product of hand finis...
Patek Geneva examined the watch and agreed that there is a defect in the case finishing that should not have passed QC. They are going to repair the case in a “return to stock” procedure that they claim will put the watch back to new condition, indistingu...
I was told that when a case is put back through production rather than service polished, they first laser weld any new metal necessary to avoid net material loss and then go through all the minute steps of factory polishing used when the case was first ma...