Quote:
Originally Posted by dannyp
Well, now I'm getting a little concerned...
After the post-winding time loss, I wore the watch every day for a few days, instead of every other. Gradually, the time loss dissipated and got closer to zero (gaining back about a second a day). Yesterday I didn't wear the watch. Today I put it back on, and it's roughly +2.5 (but was -1.5 when I took it off on Sunday night).
When I store it, granted, it's dial-up but this is how I've always kept it at night.
Reading through this thread, it seems that the issues have been more pervasive with the earliest 3235 movements, but I'm reaching the six month mark with mine, which I also seem to recall being when some of these popped up.
Does anyone know whether there were specific component changes made to the movement at some point, and whether it was all 32xx or just some?
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The movements are mass produced.
Someone in this thread said it's not a matter of if but when, given the fact they're mass produced. Only time will tell

It stands to reason this is the likely scenario given that around 1/4 of the watches are reportedly having problems in the poll.
Hopefully we will hear of a fix, but given all aspects around the nature of the issue, I would imagine Rolex are scratching their heads trying to pin the problem down.
The whole thing is compounded by the declaration by Rolex around the 10 year service intervals. But history gives context there

It looks like Rolex have simply got too far ahead of themselves this time.