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The Maestro is Raymond Weil's case for clean, no-nonsense dress wearing. A 40mm steel automatic with a proper Swiss movement and no complication noise, it sits comfortably in the gap between fashion watches and the entry Swiss majors. At used prices, it is one of the more honest values in mechanical dress watches.
Raymond Weil launched the Maestro line as its dedicated classical dress collection, positioning it above the brand's fashion-adjacent Freelancer and Toccata lines. The 2237 reference in 40mm targets the contemporary sweet spot for dress wear, replacing earlier Maestro cases that ran smaller. The RW1212 movement inside is a branded ETA 2892-A2, the same workhorse that powers a long list of Swiss mid-tier dress watches.
Raymond Weil has kept the Maestro in continuous production since 2016, updating dial variants while leaving the core proposition unchanged. The result is a watch that has accumulated a steady following among buyers who want Swiss automatic dress for everyday wear without paying Tissot Heritage or Longines pricing on the new market.
The crown is not screw-down, and the 50m water resistance rating reflects that. Do not treat this as anything but a splash-resistant watch. Dial authenticity matters here: the Maestro has appeared in a high volume of grey-market and second-hand sales, and sellers occasionally list non-original dials as factory pieces after aftermarket refinishing.
Inspect the text printing and lume plots under magnification before buying used. Raymond Weil service is proprietary in branding but the movement is a standard ETA 2892-A2, so any competent watchmaker can service it. Check that the case back gasket has been replaced on anything over five years old.
Finally, the 2237 reference number covers several dial variations spanning cream, silver, and black; confirm you are buying the specific dial you want, as photos in listings are sometimes stock images.
New, the 2237 lists in the $1,200 to $1,500 range depending on retailer and dial. Used examples in good condition routinely trade between $500 and $800, which is where the value proposition sharpens considerably. At that price you are getting a Swiss automatic dress watch with a genuinely respected base movement, not an assembled import.
The RW1212 is a decorated ETA 2892-A2, a well-documented movement with broad independent watchmaker support. A standard service interval of five to seven years applies. Parts availability is strong and service costs at an independent should be reasonable compared to proprietary caliber watches at this tier.
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The Maestro crown must carry the Raymond Weil signature; any unsigned or generic crown indicates a crown replacement.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| crown | Raymond Weil signed crown | Crown signed or branded with RW logo | Unsigned or generic crown; crown replacement |
| movement | ETA 2892-A2 base architecture through caseback | ETA 2892-A2 architecture with RW-signed rotor visible | Non-ETA architecture or unsigned rotor; service replacement movement |
| caseback | Raymond Weil serial and reference | RW serial and reference correctly engraved | Missing or incorrect engravings; non-genuine caseback |
| dial | Maestro dial configuration |
| Consistent with ref. 2237-ST-00659 formal dress dial layout |
| Incorrect layout or text; non-genuine or wrong model dial |