Howdy everyone, this is going to be my first stab at a review here. I've never actually owned a mechanical watch before so be warned, but I have dived pretty deep into their workings, history, and what interests their collectors.So I'm a student and not quite ready to blow a wad of cash on a real decent mechanical watch, but I was interested in them and wanted an inexpensive one to screw around with. I know there are some good Chinese mechanicals out there, but still at a few hundred dollars, so hence my term "ultracheap" for the kind I got, coming in at a whopping 20 bucks shipped around the world to my mailbox.Slava comes from the Moscow second watch factory, a Chinese company licenced their movement, but could not use their name, so had to call it "Cjiaba" (the J and I together look like a russian character that sounds like L). So I don't think this is a Chinese Standard Movement watch, which most ultracheaps are.Overall, not bad, especially from a distance or to the uninitiated. But we are initiated, aren't we Bruce? Here you can see that there's some fake gears on the front that I wish weren't there, they cheapen the design somehow to me. Especially the big one, as there are actual spinney bits (I think the balance wheel) behind it, that I'd rather be looking at. The glass has a blue tint, which I would rather do without, as it looks a tad blingy in the sunlight and hurts its readabilityI have no clue what this movement is called. Anywho, you can see on the metal here there is already some pock marks on the metal. I'm not sure if this is oxidation, or whatever they put on it maybe to lubricate or protect from rust, or something else, but it was there day 1. Obviously, this 20 dollar watch won't have the same finishing as 500+ dollar ones, but if it's already pre-corroding the whole thing may be rust soon. Or not, again I have no clue what it is.It's an automatic, and I've heard some cheap chinese automatics are essentualy manual winds as it's so inefficient, but this one seems great. It was even ticking when I opened the box, and it has not run out of power any time overnight.It does keep time very well though, or at least for my purposes. I synced it to the minute from Windows time, and a week later it was still at the same minute. So I don't know how many seconds it drifts per day exactly, but it has to be far less than 8 seconds per day for it to be at the same minute a week later.Oh lordie, the strap. Worst part about this watch so far. This says genuine leather on the back, but I happen to know this is PU leather, meaning a tiny sliver of leather on the bottom with polyurithane for the rest. The first time I put it on, black stuff peeled off the sides. The second time, one of the loops holding the strap in place fell off, I just fixed it with cyanoacrylate. The smallest position is way too big for my wrist, granted I have smallish wrists for a guy but they really should have had more holes.Not really a biggie, I may replace this with a Milanese steel mesh strap or something, any suggestions for a different type? Not going to spend more than what the watch cost, obviously.I'm satisfied. I mean, quality isn't great, but frankly I'm surprised they have margins at all on a real mechanical watch shipping around the world. I got my cheap fix. Even if it runs for a year, I'm ok with this.A few more pics in this album: