
Two Astronaut-Owned Best Replica Omega Speedmasters Watches Sell For Over $205K Combined
Two solid gold cheap fake Omega Speedmaster Professional watches formerly owned by Apollo-era astronauts achieved a total of more than $207,000 at auction, a sign of the enduring allure of astronaut-linked timepieces and the golden age of space exploration.
The 1:1 Omega replica watches, sold by RR Auction in a space-themed sale last week, are both engraved on their caseback with the astronaut’s name and missions encircling the phrase “To mark man’s conquest of space with time, through time, on time.” Speedmaster was NASA’s official chronograph throughout the Apollo program.
Each watch is an Omega Speedmaster Professional ref. BA 145.022, a model created to commemorate the Apollo 11 moon landing in July 1969. AAA copy Omega watches produced just 1,014 of this limited edition, reserving Nos. 1 through 28 for NASA astronauts and key officials.
The buy clone omega watches UK numbered 20 in the series (pictured at top) sold by RR for $113,438. It had belonged to Richard Gordon (1929–2017), who orbited the moon as command module pilot of Apollo 12 in November 1969 and performed two spacewalks on the Gemini 11 mission in 1966. As part of the earliest presentation series, Gordon’s timepiece is among the rarest and most coveted Speedmasters ever produced.
Astronaut Edgar Mitchell’s watch (above), which realized $93,775 at auction, is No. 1002 in the commemorative run. The sale included the piece’s original “crater” display box depicting the lunar surface. Mitchell (1930–2016) was the sixth person to walk on the moon, doing so when he served as lunar module pilot for Apollo 14 in February 1971.
Both Gordon’s and Michell’s watches feature an 18k gold case and bracelet, a burgundy “dot over 90” tachymeter bezel, a gold dial with onyx hour markers, and perfect replica Omega watches famed calibre 861 manual wind movement.
RR Auction had sold Neil Armstrong’s gold Swiss fake Omega Speedmaster watches for over $2 million earlier this year. These sales reflect the strong demand for astronaut-owned memorabilia and the continued strength of Omega’s “Golden Era” Speedmasters in the collector market, and reaffirm that provenance and storytelling are the ultimate currency—especially when timepieces mark humankind’s greatest achievements.