Fat Chance
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 2 Jul 2009
- Messages
- 2,859
If Cartier call the roll then youve gotta ask thier permission to enter the states...fuck all to do with duty or snidey joe from mexico....
That's about grey market products. Again, more related to whether you can import foreign versions of a product to sell, not about whether an individual is allowed to bring it in. Grey market products aren't fake, they're just not intended for release in the US. Basically, I can't go to a country where a Cartier watch is cheaper, buy a load of genuine models and then sell them in my shop. Same with electronics. Canon and Nikon will refuse to even look at grey market cameras and lenses in the US, for example, even if you're willing to pay for the repair. What they can't do, of course, is confiscate it.If Cartier call the roll then youve gotta ask thier permission to enter the states...fuck all to do with duty or snidey joe from mexico....
I have. I bought a fake Rolex as a joke present for someone once. It broke before I got a chance to give it to them so I took it to a watch repair place in Canada. They asked me if it was genuine. I said no. They handed it back to me and said they can't service it.Tell you what pal why don't you buy a fake Rolex send it to Rolex and see what happens .
If it's solely about grey markets i must apologise it was getting late and my mincers were on the out.That's about grey market products. Again, more related to whether you can import foreign versions of a product to sell, not about whether an individual is allowed to bring it in. Grey market products aren't fake, they're just not intended for release in the US. Basically, I can't go to a country where a Cartier watch is cheaper, buy a load of genuine models and then sell them in my shop. Same with electronics. Canon and Nikon will refuse to even look at grey market cameras and lenses in the US, for example, even if you're willing to pay for the repair. What they can't do, of course, is confiscate it.