Dr No[Moderator Omega - Wristscan]
37670
I haven't performed any timing tests on my cal 22 yet, but . . .
. . . the initial peremptory checks are within a few seconds per day, and the power reserve is 40.5 hours, exactly within the specified 40 hours +/- 5%. Btw, the cal 39 that was "essentially perfect" was my very first G O, a Karree chronograph w/o date: over an 18 week period of continuous operation (either on my wrist or a winder), the net gain was ~ 60 seconds. Whenever I checked within that 18 week window, the timing was never off by more than a few seconds. My Senator perpetual was off by ~ +11 seconds per day prior to sending it in for regulation, and has been a steady -1 second per day ever since. Not bad for an old design ;-) . . . cordially, Art
Caliber 39
By: t : January 8th, 2008-18:13
Anyone know the normal rate for a GO with caliber 39? Mine is in a sport evolution and my rates were +3 seconds after 24 hours, +8 after 48hours and +13 after 72 hours. Is this normal for caliber 39? Tom
Mine
By: db darien : January 9th, 2008-12:48
I own two G.O. watches, as Art knows (Senator Karree Manual Cal 22 and Senator Navigator Panorama Date Cal 100). Both watches run within a tolerance of + or minus 2 seconds per day. To be precise, both run fast by about 1-2 seconds per day. I understand t...
By the way, Art...
By: db darien : January 10th, 2008-19:15
Wempe Jewelers (on 5th Ave. in NYC) is currently marketing, rather heavily, a gold tonneau-shaped watch as a chonometer...that is being sold under its own name ("Wempe"). The watch is advertised as meeting "...the standards of the German Institute for Sta...
Nomos or Wempe?
By: Downing : January 10th, 2008-21:58
David, I think the watch you're referring to may actually be made by Wempe the watch manufacturer that operates out of the Glashütte Observatory. I believe the manufacturer Wempe is a different entity from the jeweler Wempe. I may be completely mistaken a...