Whats wrong with gold plated watches? Quality wise and appearance wise is there a difference?
Until it turns your arm green? Followed closely by turning your shirt sleeve green?Heck, I'd rather have brass or copper before gold plate.
I'm curious. How can you tell? And the stainless steel back isn't an acceptable answer--that is not visible to anyone but the owner.It's ugly.
The gold on a plated watch is real gold, same as on a solid watch. In fact, 14K gold-filled has a higher gold content on the visible surface than a 10K solid-gold watch.I have a gold plated Christopher Ward C5. It is over 5 years old. There is no "gold" wear on it.
At no time have anyone ever ask me if that was real gold nor have I ever said "hey look at my gold watch".
I have always refer to it as my gold-toned watch.
At the price point of "real" gold, I would never own one. It is beyond my means. Secondly gold is a relatively soft metal. My real gold solid wedding band is no longer a circle, but a oval with a pregnant hump on one side. I chose and paid for a gold band because of the meaning. A gold-toned watch is just an accessory.
I put real in quotes because at what karat is gold considered real.?
Balderdash. Gold plating is putting a coating on a base metal that will stay shiny and yellow with little or no maintenance. Few other materials will do that as well, and they aren't much cheaper (some are more expensive). When the plating is applied to steel, for example, it preserves the much greater strength of steel while providing the finish and color of gold. It is a good use of resources, just like exotic veneers over strong secondary woods, which is considered more sustainable.What's wrong with gold plating? You take a metal, you accept that it's not fine enough and you try to turn it to something that it isn't. But you fail, because it's still the same metal but now it's also a fake. Not of another watch, but of another metal.
Now it's your turn, OP. Tell me what's right with gold plating.