An interesting article from the watch snob:
Hi,
Now that Montblanc is making watches in addition to its fine pens, and also just developed its own movement, would you buy its watches? I really like its Star Chronograph Automatic, but is this just a designer watch or the real deal?
Thanks
Instead of answering your question, I will tell you an anecdote of my most recent visit to a Montblanc boutique and let you decide if they are worth buying. I walk in and am greeted by a lovely woman. I ask to speak with someone who knows about its watch line. She brings me over to their “timepieces expert.” They show me Montblanc’s new “in-house” watch, and I begin to wind the watch via the crown when the “timepieces expert” screams at me! He says: “No! You can’t wind it that way!” I inquired why; he proceeds to tell me that “some watches need to be wound by the crown, and some, called “automatic wristwatches,” can only be wound by shaking the watch,” and that if I were to wind it via the crown it would damage the movement, which couldn’t be less true. I launched into the necessary diatribe on how so very, very wrong he is and then walked out.
This is Montblanc’s timepiece expertise at its best? If you want a pen, go to Montblanc; if you want a watch, buy it from a watch company.