Showing posts with label *ARTICLE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label *ARTICLE. Show all posts

Saturday, March 7, 2015

How To Date Your Vintage Citizen Wristwatch

Citizen Watches it was thought that the Serial number worked in the same way but it is now thought to differ with the month part.... This was mainly because it was noted that there were apparently a lot of watch serial numbers with the 2nd number of 'O/0' pointing to an October manufactured Month... (O/0 either being [O]ctober or 0 = the 10th month being err October!) So the current mode of thought is like this. For example Citizen Leopard Super Beat 


Citizen Serial Number 00520517

Movt. 1st made for sale in 1970's

The 1st number of the serial number is '0' so 1970

The 2nd number is 0 [under the Seiko method we'd think October... However this is now thought to be wrong] it is the 2nd + 3rd number which is 0+5 = 05 so the Month is May

The watch was made in May 1970

Citizen Year:

Same year Method as the Seiko:

Citizen Month:

01 - January

02 - February

03 - March

04 - April

05 - May

06 - June

07 - July

08 - August

09 - September

10 - October

11 - November

12 - December

This method works well with my vintage Citizens...
I hope that it helps to dating your vintage citizen wristwatch.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

TOURBILLON WATCHES VS OPEN HEART WATCHES

Tourbillon Watches


18th century tourbillon by Bréguet

In horology, a tourbillon (pronounced /tʊərˈbɪljən/, French: [tuʁbijɔ̃], "whirlwind") is an addition to the mechanics of a watch escapement. Developed around 1795 by the French - Swiss watchmaker Abraham-Louis Breguet from an earlier idea by the English chronometer maker John Arnold a tourbillon counters the effects of gravity by mounting the escapement and balance wheel in a rotating cage, ostensibly in order to negate the effect of gravity when the timepiece (and thus the escapement) is rotated. Originally an attempt to improve accuracy, tourbillons are still included in some expensive modern watches as a novelty and demonstration of watchmaking virtuosity. The mechanism is usually exposed on the watch's face to show it off.

The Tourbillon

The Tourbillon is one of the most complex and difficult to make watch escapements. As such it is usually a mark of high quality workmanship and tourbillon watches often fetch high prices in auction houses and at the luxury end of the watch market.

What is a Tourbillon?

The tourbillon is a form of escapement for wristwatches or pocket watches. Some clocks have also been built with tourbillon escapements, even there is little reason for them.

The motive behind the tourbillon was simple: people don't stand still! To obtain maximum accuracy from a timepiece it essential that the movement of the oscillator must be isochronal - that is, it must keep regular and predictable time.

Unfortunately this is difficult to achieve when the wearer of the watch insists on moving the wrist around. Such movements cause the stresses and friction on the watch mechanism to vary, along with the influence of gravity.

A watch that tells perfect time when held at one angle might not do so at another. With clocks this is not a problem - since a clock is always in the same position, it is possible to adjust for any error. With a constantly moving wristwatch the error is itself constantly changing.

Mechanism of Action


A tourbillon assembly

Gravity was thought to have a very adverse effect on the accuracy of time pieces at the time of the invention of the tourbillon, particularly because pocket watches were often less accurate than stationary clocks of the same construction. The prevailing theory amongst horologists of the time was that pocket watches suffered from the effects of gravity since they were usually carried in the same pocketed position for most of the day, which was vertical, and then held in a different position while being read. Because the movement of pocket watches and similar pieces were oriented with respect to the cases and the dials, their movements were positioned with the axes of motion perpendicular to their faces. This meant that when the timepiece was placed vertically, the axis of motion of the movements would be parallel to the ground, and thus to the force of gravity. In such a position, the force of gravity would affect the motion of parts of the movement differently when the parts were in different positions (i.e., moving with gravity or moving against it), which would cause variations in the rate of the movement, which in turn would affect the timepieces' accuracy. If adjusted for one position, the rate would change when the piece was kept in a different position, such as when being held to be read or when placed on a table at night. In a tourbillon, the entire escapement assembly rotates, including the balance wheel, the escape wheel, the hairspring, and the pallet fork, in order to average out the effect of gravity in the different positions. The rate of rotation varies per design but has generally become standardized at one rotation per minute. Most tourbillons use standard swiss lever escapement, but some have a detent escapement, and others contain novel designs, such as the Audemars Piguet Millenary for example.

The tourbillon is considered to be one of the most challenging of watch mechanisms to make (although technically not a complication itself) and is valued for its engineering and design principles. The first production tourbillon mechanism was produced by Breguet for Napoleon in one of his carriage clocks (travel clocks of the time were of considerable weight, typically weighing almost 200 pounds).

Double-axis tourbillon


Cutout of a double-axis tourbillon pocketwatch
In 2003, inspired by the double axis tourbillon invented in the 1970's by Richard Good (see below), the young German watchmaker Thomas Prescher developed for the Thomas Prescher Haute Horlogerie the first flying double-axis tourbillon in a pocket watch and, in 2004, the first flying double-axis tourbillon with constant force in the carriage in a wristwatch. Shown at the Baselworld 2003 and 2004 in Basel, Switzerland.

A characteristic of this tourbillon is that it turns around two axes, both of which rotate once per minute. The whole tourbillon is powered by a special constant-force mechanism, called a remontoire. Thomas Prescher invented the constant-force mechanism to equalize the effects of a wound and unwound mainspring, friction, and gravitation. Thereby even force is always supplied to the oscillation regulating system of the double-axis tourbillon. The device incorporates a modified system after a design by Henri Jeanneret.

Double and Quadruple tourbillons

Robert Greubel and Stephen Forsey launched the brand Greubel Forsey[2] in 2004 with the introduction of their Double Tourbillon 30° (DT30). Both men had been working together since 1992 at Renaud & Papi, where they developed complicated watch movements. The Double Tourbillon 30° features one tourbillon carriage rotating once per minute and inclined at 30°, inside another carriage which is rotating every four minutes.

In 2005 Greubel Forsey presented their Quadruple Tourbillon à Différentiel (QDT),which uses two double-tourbillons working independently. A spherical differential connects the four rotating carriages, distributing torque between two wheels rotating at different speeds.

Triple-axis tourbillon


Triple-Axis-Tourbillon Regulator Sport

In 2004 Thomas Prescher developed the first triple-axis tourbillon for the Thomas Prescher Haute Horlogerie with constant force in the carriage in a wristwatch. Presented at the Baselworld 2004 in Basel, Switzerland, in a set of three watches including a single-axis, a double-axis, and a triple-axis tourbillon.

The world's unique tri-axial tourbillon movement for wristwatch with traditional jewel bearings only was invented by the independent watchmaker Aaron Becsei - Bexei Watches in 2007. The wristwatch PRIMUS was presented at the Baselworld 2008 in Basel, Switzerland. In the three axis tourbillion movement the 3rd (external) cage has a unique form which provides the possibility of using jewel bearings everywhere - instead of ball-bearings. This is a unique solution at this size and level of complication.

Modern tourbillon watches

In modern mechanical watch designs, a tourbillon is not required to produce a highly accurate timepiece; there is even debate amongst horologists as to whether tourbillons ever improved the accuracy of mechanical time pieces, even when they were first introduced, or whether the time pieces of the day were inherently inaccurate due to design and manufacturing techniques. Nevertheless, the tourbillon is one of the most valued features of collectors' watches and premium timepieces (Ref. August 2006 WatchTime article Girard-Perregaux's Tourbillon Icon), possibly for the same reason that mechanical watches fetch a much higher price than similar quartz watches that are much more accurate. High-quality tourbillon wristwatches, which are usually made by the Swiss luxury watch industry, are very expensive, and typically retail for at least thousands of dollars or euros, with much higher prices in the tens of thousands of dollars/euros being common. A recent renaissance of interest in tourbillons has been met by the industry with increased availability of time pieces bearing the feature, with the result that prices for basic tourbillon models have receded somewhat in recent years (where as previously they were very rare, in either antiques or new merchandise); however, any time piece that has a tourbillon will cost a great deal more than an equivalent piece without the feature.

Modern implementations typically allow the tourbillon to be seen through a window in the watch face. In addition to enhancing the charm of the piece, the tourbillon can act as a second hand for some watches as it generally rotates once per minute. However some Tourbillons spin faster (Gruebel Forsey's 24-second tourbillon for example.). There are many "Tourbillon" fake/replicas of premium brand watches that emulate this feature with the oscillating balance wheel visible through the watch dial; however, these are not tourbillons. This feature is often referred to as "open heart".

In the late 20th century, the first research into multi-axis tourbillion movements was done by British clock makers Anthony Randall and Richard Good, eventually producing two and three-axis tourbillon movements.

Affordability crisis

Several Chinese manufacturers now produce a variety of tourbillon movements. These movements are bought as Ebauches by some foreign manufacturers such as Cecil Purnell and incorporated into watches that meet the requirements of the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry to be sold as Swiss watches. The availability of cheap tourbillons has led industry spectators to worry that another "Quartz Crisis" may occur, where the Swiss watch industry will not be able to adapt quickly to cheaper complicated mechanical watches produced in other countries.

Source : Wikipedia

Open Heart Watches

Open heart watches only display the rotating mechanism of balance wheel. There is no effects of gravity on the escapement and balance wheel. The price of these watches are not expensive compared to the tourbillon.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

MARADONA MEMPOPULARKAN PAKAI DUA JAM TANGAN





DALAM WORLD CUP 2010 DI AFRIKA SELATAN, JURULATIH ARGENTINA, MARADONA MEMAKAI 2 JAM TANGAN SERENTAK. JAM TANGAN HUBLOT DIPAKAI KETIKA SETIAP PERLAWANAN ARGENTINA. SATU DI KIRI DAN SATU DI KANAN. AGAKNYA SATU WAKTU DI ARGENTINA DAN SATU LAGI WAKTU DI AFRIKA SELATAN

LEPAS NI SAPA-SAPA PAKAI DUA JAM TANGAN TIDAK AKAN MENJADI PELIK SEBAB IANYA TELAHDIPOPULARKAN OLEH MARADONA. AKU MEMANG DAH BANYAK KALI PAKAI DUA JAM NI... TAK PEDULI DENGAN APA ORANG NAK KATA!

ANDA BAGAIMANA?

My favorite types of fellow watch lovers are fellow eccentric watch lovers. In the spotlight this month due to the 2010 FIFA World Cup is none other than Argentina’s Diego Maradona. Player turned coach, the now very wealthy soccer (ahem, I mean “football”) personality is a major watch lover and has been know to wear watches on both wrists. While not a daily occurrence, Diego wears two watches mostly when he travels. It isn’t because he can’t decide on just one watch to wear each day, but rather to have two different timezones. Yes, most of you will quickly point out that there are plenty of watches with two (even more) time zone indicators on the dial, but this is how Maradona prefers it. Would you like to be the one to mention the possible error of his ways? In fact, I am pleased he is wearing two watches. I think it is an admirable look – especially for the man who prides himself on wearing large diamond earrings.

In the past Maradona wore double Rolex watches, but now the charismatic man wears Hublot timepieces. Not just any Hublot watches, but two limited edition models with his likeness of them. Few people get to wear watches made in their honor. He has two different styles of Hublot Big Bang Maradona watches. Each is a limited edition and 44.5mm wide. I don’t need to go into the technical details as the watch does not differ much from other Big Bang watches. An interesting difference on the pictures model is the chronograph, which has been change to measure 45 minutes – half of a soccer match. The watch, in black and blue, features Maradona’s jersey number, as well as signature “goal” pose, with his arms in the air. Good to see Mr. Maradona out there representing watch lovers, and Hublot feeding his horological passion.


Friday, January 1, 2010

PROJEK MASA CUTI - MEMBUAT SEMULA DIAL JAM UNICORN BERDIAL BURUK






INI PROJEK SAYA MASA CUTI, MERMBUAT BALIK DAIL JAM UNICORN. DIALNYA SEMASA SAYA TERIMA TERSANGAT BURUK DIMANA TUANPUNYA TERDAHULU TELAH MENANGGALKAN CAT ASAL DAN MENGILAPKANNYA TANPA ADA TANDA-TANDA BERKAITAN MAKLUMAT JAM DI ATAS. DIAL.


PROJEK INI SIMPLE AJE... CETAK SEMUALA TANDA-TANDA JAM SEPERTI JENAMA DAN JEWELSNYA LEPAS TU TAMPAL AJE KAT DIAL.. HASILNYA TENGOKLAH GAMBAR-GAMBAR DIBAWAH INI....


JAM UNICORN ANTARA JAM YANG BERHARGA DAN MENJADI KOLEKSI PENGUMPUL JAM-JAM VINTAGE.SAYANG KALAU DIBIARKAN TANPA BOLEH DIPAKAI, TAKPELAH WALAU TAK ORI DIALNYA ASAL DAPAT DIPAKAI DI TANGAN


BRAND/JENAMA: VINTAGE UNICORN MEN'S WRISTWATCH

CIRCA/TAHUN: 1970's

MODEL: TAK TAHU - MACAM AMPHIBIAN

CRYSTAL/CERMIN: CLEAN/BERSIH

MOVEMENT/ENJIN: SWISS UNICORN 21 JEWELS MANUAL WINDING MOVEMENT

HANDS/JARUM: SILVER TONE/ KEPERAKAN

MARKERS/TANDA WAKTU: RAISED SILVER TONE BATON/BATON KEPERAKAN

CASING : SOLID STAINLESS STEEL/ KELULI KESELURUHANNYA

MEASUREMENT/UKURAN: 30mm DIAMETER AND 33mm LUG TO LUG

DITANDA/ENGARVED BACK CASING:

CROWN: STAINLESS STEEL/KELULI

STRAP/TALI: NEW CROCO DESIGN BLACK LEATHER STRAP FITS 8.8" WRIST

VERU GOOD MOVEMENT AND CASING CONDITION AND KEEPING TIME. MOVEMENT WAS RECENTLY SERVICED.


BRIEF HISTORY OF UNICORN WATCHES


In the 1920s and 30s, Rolex has numerous secondary brands, similar to what the Tudor brand is today. One of those brands was the Unicorn. You may find these wrist and pocket watches with an unsigned dial, but Unicorn signed movement, For those of you unfamiliar with the name Unicorn, please see Cooksey Shugart's Complete Price Guide to Watches. At the back of the Rolex section is a partial list of brands that Rolex once distributed, as Rolex either set up or bought subsidiary companies with names like Bucherer, Marconi, Rolco, Genex, Unicorn.

This Unicorn watch was produced by RWAG (Rolex Watch AG) Germany was subsidiary company of Rolex Watch Company (RWC). IN 1960'S Unicorn watch was no longer under Rolex SA

Thursday, September 3, 2009

PREVIEW - MY BABY TRANSITIONAL MONSTERS






5 PIECES OF TRANSITIONAL WATCHES CIRCA 1920s -1930's. THEY ARE SO BIG, BOLD AND LARGE. SUITABLE FOR A MAN WITH MUSCLE AND LARGE WRIST BUT LOOKED VOGUE FOR ORDINARY GUY LIKE WHEN WEAR THIS BABY DINO.

2 OMEGA
1 ZENITH
1 REVEU
1 FRERES

PLEASE LOOK AT THE PICS AND COMPARE THE SIZE WITH SEIKO DIVER WHICH ALSO IN THE PICS

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

BRIEFCASE FOR WATCHES FROM HAIZUL ANTIQUE









I BOUGHT 3 BRIEFCASES FROM OUR BLOGGER HAIZUL ANTIQUE YESTERDAY. I RECEIVED THEM TODAY AND THAN YOU HAIZUL. I IMMEDIATELY PUT MY COLLECTIONS IN THAT BRIEFCASES, BUT UNFORTUNATELY THEY ARE STILL NOT ENOUGH SPACE FOR ALL MY WATCHES. I CAN ONLY PUT 32 WATCHES IN THIS CASE.

ALL THIS TIME I KEPT MY WATCHES IN THE BOXES AND IT WAS A VERY TEDIOUS PROCESS TO LOOK AND SEARCH FOR A PARTICULAR WATCH, ASKED BY CLIENTS AND FRIENDS. WITH THESE BRIEFCASES IT IS A LITTLE BIT MORE EASY AND CONVENIENT, ESPECIALLY WHEN I NEED TO BRING WATCHES FOR MEETING UP WITH FUTURE BUYERS.

FOR HAIZUL, PLEASE LET ME KNOW IF YOU HAVE MORE STOCK OF THIS BRIEFCASE AND THANKS

SAYA BELI 3 BEKAS JAM NI DARI KAWAN BLOGGER HAIZUL ANTIQUE SEMALAM. BEKAS NI SAMPAI HARI INI DAN TERUS AJE SIMPAN JAM-JAM KOLEKSI SAYA KE DALAMNYA TETAPI HANYA MUAT UNTUK 32 BIJI JAM DAN BANYAK LAGI JAM-JAM YANG TAK DAPAT DISIMPAN DALAM BEKAS INI.

SELAMA NI SAYA SIMPAN JAM-JAM SAYA DALAM KOTAK-KOTAK AJE. KALAU ADA KAEKAWAN ATAU RAKAN-RAKAN BLOGGERS NAK TENGOK JAM, SUSAH BENAR SAYA NAK CARI JAM-JAM YANG DIKEHENDAKI TU, KENA BUKA KOTAK SATU PERSATU. DENGAN ADANYA BEKAS NI SANGAT MENYENANGKAN KERJA SAYA. DAN DAH TENTU SENANG BAWAK JAM NAK GI TUNJUK KAT BAKAL-BAKAL PEMBELI.

HAIZUL, KALAU ADA STOK LAGI TOLONG BERITAHU SAYA ... TERIMA KASIH

Sunday, August 23, 2009

PROJECT - ARTWORK ON WATCH DIAL




Projek ini saya buat kerana kesian tengok jam yang dialnya dah teruk sangat, tak nampak ape-ape dan jenama pun dah tak boleh baca tapi enjin swiss 17 jewels masih berfungsi dengan baik. Cari beberapa gear dari jam yang aku kecaikan masa buat experiment merosakkan jam. Lepas tu cari berus lukisan, piring dan glows paint warna merah. Mula-mula aku gluekan 4 gear jam untuk dijadikan penanda waktu untuk jam 3, 6, 9 dan 12. Lepas itu bancuhkan glows paint ngan air. Last sekali aku sapu aje glows paint kat dial dan biarkan kering. Setelah kering, masukkan semula jarum jam, minit dan saat dan letakkan kembali cermin jam. jadilah jam dengan dial berbintik-bintik macam permukaan bulan!

Glows paint ni kalau dibiarkan kena matahari selama 15 minit akan menjadikan jam ini bercahaya pada waktu malam atau ditempat gelap.

Kerja ni sekejap aje... hasilnya biasa-biasa aje, adelah sikit nampak seni. Bukan ape, dari tak pakai sebab dialnya dah tak nampak ape-ape, boleh gak dipakai untuk tengok waktu hehehe

Monday, August 17, 2009

LEATHER WATCH STRAPS - PIG SKINS

KULIT DARI KAMBING BEBIRI AUSTRALIA (SHEEP SKIN FROM AUSTRALIA)

KULIT DARI BABI DARI KANADA (PIG SKIN FROM CANADA)

KULIT REPTILIA DARI USA (LIZARD SKIN FROM USA)

KULIT IKAN PARI FROM USA (STINGRAY SKIN FROM USA)

KULIT BUAYA DARI AUSTRALIA (CROCODILE SKIN FROM AUSTRALIA)

KULIT ANAK LEMBU DARI USA (CALF LEATHER FROM USA)

KULIT BUAYA DARI USA (CROCODILE SKIN FROM USA)

KULIT ALLIGATOR DARI USA (ALLIGATOR SKIN FROM USA)
KULIT BABI DARI BELGIUM (PIG SKIN FROM BELGIUM)

RECENTLY I BOUGHT FEW WATCH LEATHER STRAPS FROM INTERNET. I WAS NOT SURE WHAT TYPE OF LEATHER THIS STRAPS WERE MADE OF. LOOK LIKE PIG SKINS AT FIRST GLANCE. I CONTACTED MY SELLER AND HE CONFIRMED THAT THE STRAPS WERE CALF LEATHER.

I SEARCH THE NET FOR INFORMATION ON PIG SKIN WATCH STRAPS. POST HERE THE PICTURES OF ALL TYPES OF WATCH LEATHER STRAPS FOR US TO SHARE.

BARU-BARU NI SAYA BELI TALI KULIT JAM DARI INTERNET. SAYA TIDAK BERAPA PASTI APA KULIT YANG DIGUNAKAN, SEKALI IMBAS NAMPAK MACAM KULIT BABI AJE! HATI WAS-WAS! JADI TANYA BALIK KAT PENJUAL TERSEBUT. PENJUAL MENGESAHKAN IANYA ADALAH KULIT ANAK LEMBU DAN BUKANNYA KULIT BABI DAN MEMINTA SAYA SEARCH DI INTERNET MACAMNANA BENTUK KULIT BABI.

INI EMAILNYA:

From: Add sender to Contacts
To: syedmohri@yahoo.com

This is calf leather. Pigskin has little holes (do a search on ZRC pigskin, then you can tell the difference).

Best regards, bedankt,

Albertine Ravensbergen & crew

Global Watch Straps