I have never seen this type of thing in my whole lifeįrom the way they are behaving, it seems they want to steal my money. For 3 weeks they have refused to reply me emails and refused to send me back my 2000 Euros. I later read on Trustpilot that Bitsafe is a fraud and they have been stealing peoples money I have sent up to 10 emails to them asking them to send me back my 2000 Euros and they have refused to reply me It has been 3 weeks now since I have been sending emails to them. I replied, ok no problem, thank you for your services, so when are you sending my 2000 Euros back to me since you don't want me to have any account with you anymore. ![]() I contacted Bitsafe, it took them a week to reply message and then talked one nonsense about not comfortable with me having an account with them anymore and didn't give any specific reason why my account was blocked Then 3 weeks ago, I have an urgent need to transfer about 1500 Euros to my family and BAAM, the problem startedīitsafe immediately blocked my account which they didn't block when I made a deposit Then in March, I sent about 2000 Euros to my Bitsafe account and there was no problem My account was approved and there was no problem Its now 3 weeks since Bitsafe closed my account with no reasonįirst, I opened a personal account with Bitsafe for my savings in February this year. It’s hard to think of a better time-only tool watch around right now.I am still having a problem getting my money from my Bitsafe Talent account The bottom line is that the Tudor Ranger is a lot of watch for the money: a solid movement, even more solid construction and a cool, utilitarian style to more than match any other Explorer-style timepiece out there – all for less than £2,420 on the bracelet. We’ve been waiting for a new Ranger for a couple of years now and if the Black Bay Pro was Tudor’s Explorer II, then this fills the gap where the original Explorer would go. Where, for example, is my revamped North Flag? Still, it makes a lot of sense, too. After the Black Bay Pro caused a stir earlier in the year, this feels like an obvious release more than something new and cool. It’s robust, antimagnetic and offers a 70-hour power reserve, all things you want in a rugged instrument like this.ĭoes it have any downsides? Well, you could argue that it’s a bit safe. In keeping with the case shape, the new Ranger uses the same movement as the Black Bay 58, the Calibre MT5402 made by Tudor-owned movement specialist Kenissi. It also looks a little less sparse thanks to the larger bezel and better thought-out proportions. Mostly it’s very similar to the 2014 Ranger, though the red tip to the second hand is far nicer than colouring the entire thing. This being Tudor, it’s also available in a striped textile version imitating a NATO and a hybrid rubber / leather number, though honestly, you’d be objectively wrong not to opt for the metal. On the wrist it’s reassuringly weighty, helped in good part by the extremely comfortable bracelet, which sits absolutely perfectly on the wrist and comes with a flawlessly machined clasp. Thankfully there’s no date display in sight. They’re all lumed up – as is the handset which surprisingly doesn’t include Tudor’s signature Snowflake hour hand, opting for a more vintage-focused arrow instead. The dial is streamlined and legible, with oversized 12, 3, 6 and 9 and the other hour markers using batons. Not being a diving watch there’s no rotating bezel, but it still gets to a respectable 100m water resistance, perfect for, let’s say, trudging through snow. ![]() ![]() The whole thing is satin finished, hammering home that utilitarian instrument look – other than a polished accent around the edge. It’s also a bit chunkier, modelled as it is on the incredibly popular Black Bay 58. Anything smaller feels far too delicate (even if I do love a bit of bi-colour). For one, it measures in at 39mm for those that miss the larger Explorers which, in my mind, is far more in keeping with the rugged nature of exploration. 79950 is a solid alternative to the Rolex Explorer, but with more going for it than accessibility now. Just like before, the new Tudor Ranger Ref. It was a short-run hiatus however as now, to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the original 1952 expedition we have the latest edition of the Tudor Ranger, and it was worth a little bit of a wait. The Ranger surfaced again in modern Tudor in the mid-2010s, before being mothballed once again in 2020. That said, it took until the 1980s to become a reference in its own right – before being decommissioned in 1988. ![]() Post-expedition, Tudor brought the watch and its feedback improvements into the spotlight as the newly-dubbed Ranger, pretty much as an accessible alternative to the Rolex Explorer.
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