Click to view our Accessibility Statement or contact us with accessibility-related questions
Oris Artix GT Date Automatic Watch

Oris Artix GT Date Automatic Watch

bookmark_border
Where's the price?
To negotiate the best possible price for our customers, we agree to hide prices prior to logging in.
226 requests
Product Description
Narrow and sleek like a sports car, the Oris Artix GT Date automatic watch takes inspiration from the world of racing. That’s mostly thanks to its time-elapsed bezel, which can be rotated in either direction to keep track of laps—or anything else you need to time Read More

search
close
dealaholic
303
May 13, 2018
Love Oris designs. I have 3 and I get tons of compliments when I wear any one of them. Keep them coming please!!
keybers
194
May 12, 2018
A truly nice piece; at the moment, I simply don't have a good overview of my financial situation to understand whether I can splash on something like this. It's obvious this drop isn't coming to pass this time around (no one even "committed"). Hope this drop surfaces once again in the future. Bookmarking (flagging) it for now.
EwenFR
241
May 10, 2018
Nice watch but too expensive for a Sellita, should be around $500 ( because it's an Oris ).
azeemnazir
10
May 10, 2018
Is this a ladies watch?
EwenFR
241
May 10, 2018
DimaG
610
May 8, 2018
Pictures so good I can hardly breathe...
scubalab
122
May 8, 2018
Is it just me, or do the pictures for this drop really suck? They are grainy, there are only three (all of the same thing basically), and lack any detail. If I'm to spend nearly $700 on a watch, a few detailed pics would be nice (without having to look elsewhere). Pics of the caseback, crown, clasp, etc. would be helpful.
MadAnthonyWayne
63
May 15, 2018
Congratulations on your use of passive-aggressive behavior to call me a prick a second time, and you have the temerity, after making obscenity laden posts fully intended to incite anger, to demand civil discourse. I suggest you go to a mirror, look directly into it and lecture the person you see there about civil discourse.
MadAnthonyWayne
63
May 15, 2018
Professional photography work was only a sideline for a while that generated some extra money for discretionary spending. Never has been a primary occupation.
I suggest you first read my response to the dude who mentioned he worked at a TV home shopping company. Won't repeat it here. Then I suggest you do a little research about Massdrop to understand their business model and how they facilitate the sale of various products. There's an entry in Wikipedia about the company, and then Google for "Massdrop company profile" which will find sources of information about their size (# employees and annual revenue). Hoovers.com (D&B Hoovers) is one of the better sources along with Buzzfile.com for that information. Most of the rest that Google finds are about the funding they've received from investors, and who they (the investors) are, along with the company's officers, not the number of employees or annual revenue.
I knew about how Massdrop worked - their business model - and had a good idea of their size before I ever responded to anyone here. If I'm contemplating buying something from an online source, I do my homework about who they are first. Once you understand their business model - basically a sophisticated and organized "group buy" facilitator for products like this (a very over-simplified characterization) - you'll understand that expecting them to do product photography is out of the question under the business model used for selling products like this Oris. From the product for this specific watch: "After the drop ends, payment will be collected and the group’s order will be submitted to the vendor up front, making all sales final. Check the discussion page for updates on your order." I conclude from this that Massdrop puts in the order for these when the drop closes, if it meets the minimum buy quantity. Massdrop submits them to the "vendor" (presumably the Oris USA distributor) and takes care of herding them to the buyers. They don't have them sitting in a warehouse or a vault with samples available for photography, samples that cannot be sold as "brand new" once they've removed all the protective plastic, hang tags, and other protective wrappings. Anyone receiving that one would be screeching about fraud, claiming they were shipped a "used" watch. If you've bought a new watch on line before, you know what it should look like when you get it, if it is truly brand new. You also know it's impossible to photograph one with all the plastic stuff covering the crystal, back, bracelet and clasp, and sometimes blue stuff painted onto the end of the crown. What do they do with that one? Eat it as the cost of doing business? I think not. They use catalog photos provided by Oris. If you want to gripe and complain about the photos, it should be directed at Oris, not Massdrop.
electryx
1
May 8, 2018
Pretty watch, a little small for my wrists otherwise I was considering it. Thanks Massdrop.
SkipPp
278
May 8, 2018
I thought hard about the Oris moonphase, but I simply did not love it. I would love to see a Baum & Mercier drop. They seem to be having deals lately, and their new pens are really well-made. The triple date moonphase keeps calling me, but I would like it best significantly discounted, and Baum & Mercier (along with Breitling) appears to be dumping stock.
electryx
1
May 8, 2018
SkipPpWhat evidence do you have of Breitling dumping stock? (cos i'd love to know where!)
electryxIt's the presumption and misconception by some here that anything appearing on Massdrop is a manufacturer dumping existing stock because: (a) they're going to discontinue it (if it hasn't been already), or (b) they simply cannot sell it because it's their ugly red-headed stepchild, or (c) they're in dire financial straits on the verge of bankruptcy, or (d) all of the above.
Recent Activity
Professional photography work was only a sideline for a while that generated some extra money for discretionary spending. Never has been a primary occupation. I suggest you first read my response to the dude who mentioned he worked at a TV home shopping company. Won't repeat it here. Then I suggest you do a little research about Massdrop to understand their business model and how they facilitate the sale of various products. There's an entry in Wikipedia about the company, and then Google for "Massdrop company profile" which will find sources of information about their size (# employees and annual revenue). Hoovers.com (D&B Hoovers) is one of the better sources along with Buzzfile.com for that information. Most of the rest that Google finds are about the funding they've received from investors, and who they (the investors) are, along with the company's officers, not the number of employees or annual revenue. I knew about how Massdrop worked - their business model - and had a good idea of their size before I ever responded to anyone here. If I'm contemplating buying something from an online source, I do my homework about who they are first. Once you understand their business model - basically a sophisticated and organized "group buy" facilitator for products like this (a very over-simplified characterization) - you'll understand that expecting them to do product photography is out of the question under the business model used for selling products like this Oris. From the product for this specific watch: "After the drop ends, payment will be collected and the group’s order will be submitted to the vendor up front, making all sales final. Check the discussion page for updates on your order." I conclude from this that Massdrop puts in the order for these when the drop closes, if it meets the minimum buy quantity. Massdrop submits them to the "vendor" (presumably the Oris USA distributor) and takes care of herding them to the buyers. They don't have them sitting in a warehouse or a vault with samples available for photography, samples that cannot be sold as "brand new" once they've removed all the protective plastic, hang tags, and other protective wrappings. Anyone receiving that one would be screeching about fraud, claiming they were shipped a "used" watch. If you've bought a new watch on line before, you know what it should look like when you get it, if it is truly brand new. You also know it's impossible to photograph one with all the plastic stuff covering the crystal, back, bracelet and clasp, and sometimes blue stuff painted onto the end of the crown. What do they do with that one? Eat it as the cost of doing business? I think not. They use catalog photos provided by Oris. If you want to gripe and complain about the photos, it should be directed at Oris, not Massdrop.
Related Products