tee530
427
Just watch out for the lampposts...
...when you're heading home; they're murder on watches...
Actually one vintage model came to mind: IWC's Yacht Club (1967-1975). Despite the milquetoast name, it came with rubber shock-absorbing movement mounts, real water resistance (100 m), and the great IWC caliber 854 or 8541 (date). This has the Pellaton winding system with the rotor mounted on a flexible bridge, plus a Breguet overcoil hairspring and adjustable mass balance. Of the three "named" lines of the period from IWC (Ingenieur - magneticproof, Aquatimer - waterproof, and Yacht Club - shockproof), the latter is probably the least appreciated today, probably because of the semitonneau case and the aforementioned name.
I'm looking for one right now...
Tom
That's a large topic.
By: mkvc : July 4th, 2010-23:45
I have a few thoughts on "robustness." First, some watches are designed to tighter tolerances than others. Those that can work with fairly loose tolerances will be able to take more abuse than those that depend on everything's being "just right." Certain ...
A few more thoughts...
By: tee530 : July 5th, 2010-20:02
Robustness covers a couple of different features, not all completely correlated. For example: Robustness could be resistance to serious damage caused by severe impact (dropping, etc). Shock-mounted movement; thick, deforming case, and large caliber would ...
from the depths
By: amerix : July 15th, 2010-14:39
As a reply to " have no concerns in say wearing a chronograph, while out running, but would it be a wise to wear a perpetual calendar performing the same activity?" I remember these lines from a "vaudeville" show, the lowest class of caberet entertainment...