Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ambulance Chaser 
I have no idea what you're trying to say here, but what's ridiculous about wanting a watch winder for a perpetual calendar? NR probably doesn't wear his perpetual every day and would rather not reset it after it winds down. It seems to me that a perpetual calendar is the one watch for which a winder is an almost necessity.
Put yourself in 2007:
You don't need a mechanical perpetual calendar. They are expensive to purchase. They are expensive to maintain (services can easily cost $2000+, depending on the brand). They redundant, as one can find all the information one seeks and more simply by looking at the calendar feature of his computer desktop. Thus, to add unwanted stress to the mechanical components of a watch that is going to be very pointlessly expensive to fix would be akin to shooting yourself in the foot and all to save a few minutes readjusting the watch.
That said, what are the reasons to own one? An appreciation of the watchmaker's art, of the skill and design and craftsmanship it takes to make one; of the execution of minuscule creation. Part of that satisfaction of precision and art comes from the tactile feel one gets by utilizing the crown, by pushing the complications pushers, by adjusting the watch precisely to where you want it to be.
It's the equivalent of purchasing a Alpa 12 SW and complaining that you have to adjust everything yourself, and that you wish to add an auto winding rotor to it to speed up the process, when in reality, many other more "˜practical' cameras exist.
Jon.