Orology in a sentence as a noun

I love all things related to horology. That said, if I bought a new Rolex, I really wouldn't own the watch the minute it went out of warranty.

I will keep two boxes of non-fiction, and most of of 1st editions, if possible, and all my Horology books. The used book business is dead, which I find sad.

It might explain\nmy hobby with horology? I know there's a fine line between \nliving every day as your last, and indigent, but we drop \nso easily.

Horology isn't a "very online" kind of pursuit. One of the challenges starting out is getting watches that were made to be repaired, but aren't too expensive.

Or the owner just appreciates horology and the cost is less meaningful to them because they are wealthy. I own a cheap mass produced mechanical watch.

It feels like horology, but dirty. * Sewing machines are suprisingly complex.

****, not a single haute horology house advertises how many jewels they have in their movement. They simply label it, and you won't see it in any marketing material because it's irrelevant.

Horology, Ecclesiastical history and lattice structures in one article. Thanks for posting.

And no, jewels are used in watch movements for legit reasons, and no haute horology manufacturers add them for the sake of status symbol, you are just making it up there. I actually don't think you know much about mechanical watches at all, and if you think mechanical engineering is the same as Monster's cables...

I admit i know next to nothing about horology but as a software engineer i have trouble believing it has more complexity than a similarly priced family saloon or even a mobile phone, or a microprocessor. My point with the Chinese sweatshop example was its really about the image that they want to be associated with.

I suspect that horological innovation will increase in the next few years as smaller companies are able to manufacture interesting movements at scale without charging the hand-made costs that independent watchmakers and haute horology brands have demanded in the past, and the ETA phase-out leads manufacturers to consider in-house production over bauche purchase.

Orology definitions

noun

the science of mountains

See also: orography