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TwoTone

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  1. BASELWORLD 2005 on Track for another outstanding Success January 26, 2005 Following the resounding success of BASELWORLD 2004 – the world’s leading watch and jewellery show – the Show is introducing a number of new innovative initiatives for the 2005 Show (31 March to 7 April 2005). Preparations are well underway. The current number of confirmed registrations and the positive feedback from the 2004 exhibitor and visitor survey, indicate that BASELWORLD 2005 will yet again prove to be the premier event in the luxury goods calendar. Building on this success and as part of the Show management’s commitment to optimise the commercial scope of the Watch and Jewellery Show, the Hall of Elements has been substantially upgraded for BASELWORLD 2005. Following the on-going extensive reconstruction programme, this Hall which is dedicated to the gemstones and pearls sector, has received a total redesign. This initiative will enable exhibitors to present their products, precious stones and pearls in a luxurious environment allowing for the first time sufficient space for multi-storey stands. Sylvie Ritter, the Show Director, comments “This Hall will now provide exhibitors from the gemstones, pearls and diamonds sectors with a distinctive platform and infrastructure which is compatible with the rest of the Show”. As part of ensuring that the BASELWORLD infrastructure is as streamlined and efficient as possible for exhibitors and visitors alike, the Show management continues to be committed to strengthening the scope and quality of the visitors service. As part of this, a new hotel reservation service has been introduced this year. This is being run in conjunction with a major international partner – BTI Event Solutions - which specialises in organising premium business travel. For the first time, visitors will be able to make their reservations directly on-line at www.baselworld.com/hotel, thus ensuring a quick and effortless process. Furthermore, to facilitate easy access to the Show itself, some door-to-door transportation with shuttle buses to and from the event will be available during the day. Another new innovation designed to improve the visitors’ service and assist the growing number of international visitors, is the introduction of eleven languages to the BASELWORLD website. This is a first within the watch and jewellery show sector and will provide a choice of languages ranging from Portuguese, Arabic and Chinese to Hebrew, Japanese and Russian. Sylvie Ritter concludes “The new online-services are meeting the extensive needs of our visitors and exhibitors. All of these exciting new initiatives and innovations are designed to strengthen the international status of the Show as the premier event and business platform for the industry. The Show attracted a record number of 89,350 visitors in 2004 and we are confident that BASELWORLD 2005 will be again a great success for exhibitors and visitors alike. The next date for the watch and jewellery sector is the BASELWORLD 2005, from 31 March to 7 April 2005, the Show with the greatest impact on the industry. Source: Baselworld – The Watch and Jewellery Show
  2. N E W M o d e l – Fortis 24 Hour Limited Edition Jan 24, 2005 The latest from Fortis is this 24 hour watch which features one hand to read the time. It was designed by Swiss artist Rolf Sachs. Movement is an automatic ETA caliber 2824 that indicates the hours and minutes with one hand and the seconds with a red hand. It is available with a rubber or a leather strap or a stainless steel bracelet. Courtesy Timezone N E W B r a n d – Otto Schlund Zeittechnik Jan 24, 2005 Based in Schwenningen, Germany, this new brand is proud to boast its “Made in Germany” credentials. Their collection features the Korona Sport Flieger, a 40mm stainless steel watch that is equipped with an automatic ETA caliber 2824-2 and a sapphire crystal and display back. MSRP for the Korona is 800 Euros. The Classic Power Reserve is housed in a 39mm stainless steel case, and is equipped with an automatic SOPROD caliber 9035 (base ETA 2892-A2). It has a sapphire crystal and its MSRP is 1,950 euros. Courtesy Timezone N E W B r a n d - Koony Sun & Co. Jan 25, 2005 Based in Richmond, British Columbia (Canada), Koony Sun specializes in professional pilot’s watches. Amongst their various offerings are the Pilot 9025 with a 41mm stainless steel case (and a 32mm for the ladies). Crystals are mineral and water resistance is good to 100 meters. Movements are quartz. The Cross Country 9027 measures 40mm, is done in stainless steel, has a mineral crystal and is water resistant to 40 meters. It has a display back. Movement is a Seiko AGS (Automatic Generating System). A transparent hour disc indicates the Zulu time and the four continental zones Pacific, Mountain, Center and Eastern times are all shown at same time. Each color lettering represents each time zone and the luminous hour pointers. The Airman 9045 Chronograph measures 38mm in a stainless steel case. It has a mineral crystal and is water resistant to 100 meters. Movement is a Japanese Miyota OS caliber with alarm complication and 1/20 seconds counter. Courtesy Timezone N E W M o d e l – Junghans Piazza Automatic Jan 25, 2005 German maker Junghans has created a new line of mechanical watches, named Piazza. The chronograph features a stainless steel case that measures 41.5mm X 15mm. The crystal is sapphire and the display back is mineral. A gold PVD version is also available. Movement is the automatic ETA caliber 7750. The Piazza is water resistant to 50 meters. Courtesy Timezone N E W B r a n d – Vincent Berard Jan 26, 2005 Vincent Berard S.A., based in La Chaux-de-Fonds, has issued its first timepiece, the "Quatre Saisons" (Four Seasons). This horological creation comes in four versions, each embellished with the changing gold and enamel colors evoking its particular season: green gold for spring, yellow gold for summer, red gold for autumn and white gold for winter. The dials on all four watches are done in gold, corresponding to the color of the case. They had a domed sapphire crystal, and feature a quarter repeater striking mechanism and an automaton. The blued gold hands showing the hours and minutes glide gracefully over large hour-markers in the same gold color, while three subdials, arranged to resemble the Celtic "triskel", display the date, day, month and seconds of a perpetual calendar indicating the leap years. The transparent case-back is closed by a cover in the same gold as the season, the name of which is engraved by hand. A half-moon aperture reveals the 10-day power-reserve indicator. The cases weigh 600grams and measure 91mm X 32mm. The movements feature a 10-day power-reserve with spring for adjusting tension in the gears, a quarter repeater striking mechanism, and automaton, a perpetual calendar displaying the leap years and a bimetallic thermometer with tension spring. Courtesy Timezone Chronographe Suisse Cie. Collection Jan 26, 2005 The trademark Chronographe Suisse Cie. has been resurrected by the Monteverde Luxury Group based in La Chaux-de-Fonds. At the Baselworld 2003 exhibition, the company premiered the Mangusta Supermeccanica, a diving chronograph that comes in a stainless steel case measuring 51mm. Movement is the automatic chronograph caliber CSC 266C20 (base Dubois-Depraz) with a 38-hour power reserve and 51 jewels. It is water resistant to 200 meters. Now the firm has released a Destro version (right hand side pushers and crown) a dressier version named the Stupenda, and the Rivasport which is tad smaller at 45mm! No word yet on their U.S. availability. Courtesy Timezone N E W M o d e l – Moschino Hours & Minutes Jan 27, 2005 Italian fashion house Moschino has a licensing agreement with the Sector Group for the creation of timepieces bearing its name. Their latest model is the Hours & Minutes. The case is in stainless steel, with a mineral crystal and water resistance to 30 meters. Dials can be had in pink, black, brown, and dark blue. Movement is a Swiss quartz module. Courtesy Timezone Limes Offers New Bracelets Jan 27, 2005 German maker Limes has announced that its Pharo collection chronograph and power reserve models can now be had with a stainless steel Milanaise mesh bracelet as an option. Courtesy Timezone
  3. N E W M o d e l – Davosa Vireo GMT Jan 21, 2005 Davosa, founded in 1861, is based in Tramelan. Their latest is the Vireo GMT. The case, in stainless steel, measures 42mm X 11.5mm. The crystal is sapphire and it is water resistant to 50 meters. Movement is the automatic ETA caliber 2893-2 with second timezone function which can be seen through the display back. Courtesy timezone N E W M o d e l s – Diesel Automatic Collection Jan 21, 2005 Founded in 1978 in Vicenza, Italy, Diesel is a noted fashion clothing manufacturer. It has a licensing agreement with Fossil Industries for the creation of fashion watches. Their newest additions are a collection of automatic time-only and automatic chronographs, all made by Fossil in their Swiss facilities. Movements are all Swiss ETA automatic calibers (2892-A2 for the time-only and 2894-2 for the chronograph). The cases are in stainless steel and feature double sapphire crystals. Water resistance is good to 100 meters. MSRP starts at 900 Euros for the time-only models, up to 2,000 Euros for the chronograph. Courtesy timezone
  4. INDUSTRY NEWS – Rado V10K – The World’s Hardest Watch Jan 21, 2005 The creation of ‘the hardest watch on earth’, has been the mission of the Swiss watch manufacturer Rado since its launch of the world's first scratchproof watch over 40 years ago. The objective was to produce a watch as hard but as elegant as a genuine diamond – the hardest known material. This has been fulfilled by the Rado V10K, the world's first watch made of high-tech diamond. The creation of a watch with the hardness degree of 10,000 Vickers represents a technological quantum leap. With the new V10K, Rado has now pushed forward the absolute limits of ‘scratchproofness’. The lateral elements of the rectangular case and the pure, elegant connecting pieces between sapphire crystal and caoutchouc (rubber) strap are protected against scratching with the diamond hardness of 10,000 Vickers. Case back and strap clasp are in skin-friendly titanium. As with the Rado 'eSenza', the crown has also been omitted from the V10K, for reasons of design aesthetics. The time can be easily adjusted on the case back by means of the magnetic contact element that is integrated into the strap. Given a clear, striking form by Rado designers and protected by several patents as a worldwide innovation, the world's hardest watch is available in one size and with variously colored caoutchouc (rubber) straps. The abbreviation 'V10K' stands for Vickers 10,000. Vickers is a measure of hardness that is used particularly in material technology. 10,000 Vickers is the ultimate value that, so far, only diamonds attain, as only diamonds can scratch all other materials. This top value, also reached by the upper surface of the V10K, means that diamond is the only material that can scratch the upper surface of the V10K. Courtesy timezone
  5. Fossil Unveil's New Abacus Wrist Net Smart Watches Jan 19, 2005 At the recently concluded CES (Consumer Electronics Show) in Las Vegas, Fossil announced a new PDA wristwatch powered by Palm technology and an updated Wrist Net wristwatch with MSN Direct. The new Abacus Wrist Net smart watches are available in two different styles and feature new casings and an assortment of colorful integrated leather bands. Using the MSN Direct wireless service developed by Microsoft Corporation, the Abacus enables people to stay connected to customized information by delivering personalized news, weather, sports scores, stock quotes, horoscopes, lottery results, personal messages, entertainment news, movie listings, and more. The latest Abacus will hit stores shelves in the Spring and are priced at a MSRP of $129. Courtesy timezone N E W M o d e l – Officina del Tempo Agadir GMT Jan 19, 2005 Another new model from Italian watchmaker Officina del Tempo is the Agadir GMT. The case, done in 316L stainless steel has a curved mineral crystal. The leather strap measures 25mm wide. Movement is the quartz Japanese Miyota caliber 6M17 with second time zone function. It is water resistant to 100 meters. Courtesy timezone N E W M o d e l – Pulsar Europa Chronograph Jan 19, 2005 The latest from Seiko brand Pulsar is the Europa collection, which is highlighted by its cushion case design. The stainless steel case measures 38.5mm X 11mm. The dial is available in black or white with blued hands. The crystal is mineral and it is water resistant to 30 meters. A quartz time-only version is also available. Movement is the Seiko caliber 7T32 with alarm and chronograph. MSRP is $165 to $185. Courtesy timezone
  6. N E W M o d e l – Timex Expedition E-Compass Jan 18, 2005 The latest from American company Timex is the Expedition E-Compass. It features an electronic compass with a declination adjustment scale and two-way directional turning ring. The red hand points North at the press of a button. The stainless steel case measures 38mm and is water resistant to 100 meters. MSRP is $100. Courtesy timezone N E W M o d e l – Hermes Dressage Moonphase Jan 18, 2005 French luxury goods maker Hermes has added a new feature to its Dressage model, a moonphase. The case, in platinum, measures 40mm. Movement is the Vaucher caliber P1929 with retrograde date and moonphase complications. Power reserve is in excess of 55 hours. It has a sapphire crystal and a display back. It is water resistant to 50 meters. An 18kt rose gold version is also available. Courtesy timezone N E W M o d e l – Sinn 142 Titanium D1 Jan 18, 2005 To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the 1985 space flight that saw the Sinn 142 become the first automatic chronograph in space, at the hands of German Astronaut-Professor Reinhard Furrer, Sinn has re-issued a new Limited Edition 142 chronograph. Sinn has procured the last 500 calibers of the famously robust Lemania 5100 movements that are still available. A first batch of 50 pieces is available with a COSC chronometer certification. The case is in titanium, with sapphire crystal and offers 100 meters of water resistance. Courtesy timezone Seiko Teams with B·A·R Honda F1 Racing Team Jan 18, 2005 SeikoWatch President & CEO Shinji Hattori has signed a worldwide Team Partner agreement with the B·A·R Honda Formula One team. Last year, Seiko partnered with F1 pilot Takuma Sato to challenge and pursue "accuracy and quality," objectives similar to Seiko's. Because F1 reflects the highest peak of innovative technology in motor sports, Seiko selected Mr. Sato as the company's image character in Japan to embody the company’s message: "Innovation & Refinement." The B·A·R Honda team entered the Formula One World Championship in 1999. It is just six years old, but it has already become one of the leading teams. The B·A·R Honda team finished second to Ferrari in the FIA Constructor's Championship with 119 points at the end of the 2004 season. Also, Jenson Button finished third in the FIA Drivers' Championship and Takuma Sato finished in eighth position. The B·A·R Honda team will be one of the most-watched F1 teams in 2005. Seiko was established in 1881, and for the last 124 years its business philosophy has been to "deliver precise time" while improving "accuracy and quality" on the worldwide stage. Seiko has over 40 years of active involvement in sports timing and sponsorship since the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games, including 6 Olympic Games, 8 IAAF World Championships and many hundreds of other international events and sports from swimming to cycling and Paralympic events. The agreement between the B·A·R Honda and Seiko Watch Corporation covers a 3 year period and represents Seiko's first international involvement in Formula One racing. The B·A·R Honda team is confident of its performance for 2005 and the "SEIKO" logo will initially appear on the uniforms of the drivers. Seiko will also supply the team with its leading-edge sports watch collection: Sportura. The drivers, Takuma Sato and Jenson Button will wear the very latest Kinetic Chronograph models, designed especially for motor sports. Courtesy timezone
  7. Survey: watches key to elegance for both sexes JANUARY 14, 2005 - New York -- Thirty-five percent of Americans wear fine jewelry every day, and watches remained an important elegant accessory for both sexes, according to the Longines Elegance in America survey released last week. Survey respondents, age 24 or older with an income of at least $75,000, owned an average of 4.5 watches. The survey found the most elegant men's accessories were cufflinks, watches and ties, according to respondents. Those polled consider the most elegant women's accessories to be bracelets, necklaces and rings. Jewelry also plays a major role in the four occasions those surveyed deemed the most elegant times of the year: weddings, gala, fundraisers and award ceremonies. It also accentuates the ensembles those polled found most elegant: tuxedos for men and formal evening gowns for women. Fashion designers Armani, Dior and Versace are believed to create the most elegant clothing. The survey found that more than 60 percent of Americans think elegance is dying out, but 30 percent consider themselves elegant. National Jeweler Casio responds to warning about watches and terrorism JANUARY 14, 2005 - Dover, N.J. -- Casio Inc. has reached out to U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials and offered its services, following an advisory citing the popularity of the company's wristwatches with terrorists. Early in January, DHS along with the FBI issued an advisory urging the Transportation Security Administration to have airport screeners keep an eye out for watches containing butane lighters and Casio watches with altimeters. "Recent intelligence suggests al-Qaida has expressed interest in obtaining wristwatches with a hidden butane-lighter function and Casio watches with an altimeter function. Casio watches have been extensively used by al-Qaida and associated organizations as timers for improvised explosive devices. The Casio brand is likely chosen due to its worldwide availability and inexpensive price," the advisory reads. Casio Legal Affairs Director Robert Shapiro says that while the company has received very little response from retail and consumer customers regarding the advisory, Casio is eager to work with DHS to limit any potential threat and deal with concerns. "We hope to have a meeting where we can help screeners with identifying the watch and understand how it's used, how it functions. If they feel it's an issue, we'll try to come out with a tool or public service announcement to help minimize any types of problems they may have," Shapiro says. "We see this as an opportunity to help them." Casio is a member of the Homeland Security Industries Association (HSIA), a nonprofit corporation that seeks to provide a mechanism for government and the private sector to coordinate on a wide range of homeland security issues. Courtesy: National Jeweler
  8. N E W M o d e l – Burberry Heritage Chronograph Jan 10, 2005 The latest addition to the Heritage Collection is this chronograph. The case, in stainless steel, measures 39mm and features a mineral crystal. Movement is a Swiss quartz ETA caliber G10.211. MSRP is $525. Burberry watches are mady under license by Fossil in Switzerland. Courtesy: Timezone Uma Thurman, Brad Pitt and Juan Pablo Montoya Superstars join TAG Heuer’s ambassadorial team. January 12, 2005 Hardly a month after the announcement of sparkling new tennis star Maria Sharapova as a new TAG Heuer global sport woman ambassador, TAG Heuer announced today that Hollywood superstars Uma Thurman and Brad Pitt (Brad Pitt will endorse TAG Heuer worldwide except in the USA and Canada) will be joining its prestigious roster of Brand Ambassadors, together with the legendary McLaren-Mercedes Formula 1 driver Juan Pablo Montoya. Together with long-established ambassadors Tiger Woods and Kimi Raïkkönen, this announcement brings together the most extraordinary team of ambassadors ever gathered by a luxury brand for conveying its image and inspiring its product development. Like Tiger Woods, Kimi Raïkkönen and Maria Sharapova, Uma Thurman, Brad Pitt and Juan Pablo Montoya will actively participate in TAG Heuer communications and provide valuable input in the design of TAG Heuer products. The ambassadors will be featured in the new 2005 “What are you made ofi” campaign, shot by top fashion photographer Patrick Demarchelier. The campaign’s new layout will further emphasize TAG Heuer’s contemporary, daring and understated style In bringing together sporty-minded Hollywood icons and charismatic sport stars, TAG Heuer strengthens its identity as the contemporary quintessence of success, sport and elegance, artfully blending sport with glamour. TAG Heuer's Unique Legacy as the Number One Sports and Glamour Brand "Brad Pitt and Uma Thurman are consistent with our rich history of cinematic glamour, the roots of which go back to Steve McQueen, the brand's long-time ambassador of the iconic Monaco chronograph,” says Jean-Christophe Babin, President and CEO of TAG Heuer. Steve McQueen first wore the famous blue squared-off chronograph in the 1970 hit, Le Mans. TAG Heuer timepieces have always been highly coveted by movie actors and art directors. Among the many stars who have worn TAG Heuer watches and chronographs on-screen are Hollywood greats Charlton Heston and Jack Lemmon. TAG Heuer has also starred on the wrists of Burt Reynolds and Bo Derek. Today, TAG Heuer's collaborative efforts in Hollywood have given the brand more big-screen presence than ever, with major visibility in 2004 hits like The Bourne Supremacy, Collateral, and Closer. Behind the camera, TAG Heuer developed the celebrated “TV Film-Master” stopwatch in the 1960s, allowing celebrated Hollywood directors to measure the consumed footage of their film sequences, both in 35 mm sound film and 16 mm still film. “TAG Heuer is far more than a brand that creates and manufactures sporty luxury timepieces. It is a cutting-edge brand that has a formidable history of excellence, precision, prestige and performance. TAG Heuer has always used sport and arts as a source of inspiration, a driving philosophy and attitude on how to tackle life proactively, passionately and creatively. The result is the brand’s outstanding line of superior quality timepieces. What binds Uma and Brad on the one hand, and Maria, Juan Pablo, Tiger and Kimi on the other, is a similar commitment to excellence, a willingness to surpass oneself, and an obsessive quest for exceptional achievements as well as mental strength and a natural elegance in their challenging endeavors.” All these values mirror TAG Heuer’s values, evolved from 145 years of watchmaking history and perfectly encapsulated in the new “What are you made of i” campaign orchestrated by Patrick Demarchelier. In addition to the global ambassadors announced today, TAG Heuer will partner with other major movie and sport stars on a local and regional basis in the coming year. These include Chinese NBA Houston Rockets player Yao Ming, Bollywood superstars Shah Rukh Khan and Sushmita Sen, Nascar idol Jeff Gordon, Indy Racing League 2003 champion Scott Dixon, Champ Car 2004 World Champion Sébastien Bourdais, Euro-PGA Golf star Ian Poulter, world free diving record-holder Tanya Streeter, and Japanese top fashion model Ai Tominaga. TAG Heuer, the benchmark in prestigious sports watches and chronographs since 1860, currently ranks as the fourth luxury brand in the world watch market. The Swiss watchmaking legend draws from its active engagement in the world of sports to create the most accurate measuring instruments and sports-inspired timepieces ever made. From the Olympic Games in the 1920s to its new role as official timekeeper and chronograph for the legendary Indy 500 and IRL championship, TAG Heuer has maintained a constant quest for innovation and excellence, pursuing the summit of performance and prestige. This is reflected in its partnerships with Team McLaren Mercedes in Formula 1 racing; with Tiger Woods and Ian Poulter at the highest levels of international golf and with Juan Pablo Montoya and Kimi Raïkkönen at the top of Formula 1. With Brad Pitt and Uma Thurman, TAG Heuer more than ever stands for “Sport and Glamour”. Photos: 1. Uma Thurmann, 2. Brad Pitt, 3. Juan Pablo Montoya, 4.Uma Thurmann and Jean-Christophe Babin Source: TAG Heuer Courtesy europastar N E W M o d e l – Nike Lance Armstrong Tour Watch Pack Jan 12, 2005 This limited edition combo features the Lance Race Watch and the brand-new Lance Race Chrono. The Race Chrono features analog time and date display, a chronograph function, a mineral glass crystal, and water resistance to 100 meters. The case is in titanium and measures 40.5mm. Paired with the watch Lance wore in his record breaking 6th Tour victory, the Lance Race Watch, this is the ultimate gift. MSRP is $449 Courtesy timezone Oris Upgrades Sponsorship with BMW Williams F1 Team Jan 12, 2005 Oris has announced that they have become an on-car sponsor for the BMW Williams Formula One team for 2005 and beyond. Oris joined the BMW Williams team as an official watch partner in January of 2003. Building a marketing strategy around synergies of precision mechanical engineering shared by both organisations, Oris has used its partnership to bring this long-established premium time-keeping brand to the attention of new markets and consumers. Based on this Formula One engagement, where one hundredth of a second can make the difference between winning and loosing Oris has developed an Oris Williams Collection including a number of limited edition chronographs. On the announcement of the new Oris relationship, BMW Williams Team Principal Frank Williams said, “I am delighted that Oris consider their original investment to have worked so well, and their increased commitment to the programme is a validation of the value Formula One offers. I hope the increased investment will continue to offer measurable business benefits to Oris, and I thank them for their continued support for the team.” Ulrich Herzog, Chairman and CEO of Oris said, “The rationale for our initial partnership with the BMW Williams was obvious. However, I have been delighted with the tangible results we have achieved in building the Oris brand visibility over the past two years, and of course, how this has positively influenced our worldwide sales. Based on this success, we are confident that the Oris brand appearing on the BMW Williams race cars, visible to a global audience of 300 million, will contribute to the Oris success story.” Courtesy timezone N E W M o d e l – TCM Air First 55 Pelican Jan 14, 2005 TCM (Terra, Cielo, Mare) is an Italian company founded by the distributor of The British Masters in Italy. They specialize in military inspired watches. Their latest is the AirFirst 55 Pelican. It features a stainless steel case, in black PVD, that measures 55mm. It is a limited edition of 500 pieces. Movement is an automatic ETA caliber 2824, with personalized rotor. MSRP is 980 Euros. Courtesy timezone Antiquorum Sales in Hong Kong Jan 14, 2005 Following the increase of interest in Asia for antique timepieces, Antiquorum is launching bi-annual sales in Hong Kong, with a first auction on February 20th. Titled "Important Watches, Collector's Wristwatches & Clocks", this auction of more than 200 pieces, some especially made for the Chinese market, will be held in the Harbour Room at the Ritz Carlton Hotel, Hong Kong on Sunday the 20th of February. Antiquorum Hong Kong has had its office moved to larger premises on Queens' Road Central, with proper exhibition facilities. The staff has been further reinforced with the arrival of the very dynamic Peony Kiu and her team. Antiquorum Hong Kong will be playing a major role during the year of 2005. Of Antiquorum's 11 auctions scheduled all over the world, Hong Kong will organize two, hold several previews for the benefit of Geneva and New York auctions, and will organize the important exhibition of "The Quarter Millennium of Vacheron Constantin" in Taipei in March. Among the highlights to be auctioned are: A Lange & Söhne Lange 1 Tourbillon, the Ref. 704.025. Made in a limited edition of 150 pieces in platinum. Estimated at US $80,000 to $120,000. A military diving Rolex, the Ref. 6154, made circa 1943. Estimated at US $15,000 to $20,000. And this Vacheron & Constantin Perpetual Calendar Squelette, made circa 2000. Estimated at US $20,000 to $30,000. Courtesy timezone
  9. Axcent's Rocker January 11, 2005 With a successful background in graphic design Daniel Jakobsson from Gothenburg is known for his extraordinary design talent in fashion and product development. Today, he is not only an innovative and devoted watch designer for Axcent of Scandinavia, but also the company’s Brand Manager. Daniel is influenced by everything from car races in soap operas of the 60s and 70s with muscular macho-men and high-healed ladies, to cutting-edge fashion, scifi and the sphere-shaped houses built on the moon. X1000M-838 Daniel’s creative time collection is booming worldwide, being featured in all the leading international fashion, design and lifestyle magazines. Rock the Nation Brown in everything from cognac to camel nuances along with blood red are some of the hottest colours the fashion houses presented on the catwalk for this autumn’s fashion. Axcent is now updating Rocker with new must-have colours in deep cappuccino, camel brown and red. The brown straps are made of the finest suede and the red in italian leather. Source : Axcent Press Release http://www.axcent.se
  10. U.S. to press China over piracy Evans, above, says the U.S. wants to see significant piracy prosecutions. Monday, January 10, 2005 WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. President George W. Bush's administration wants China to crack down on the rampant piracy of U.S. movies, music and computer programs and will not be satisfied until copyright violators get stiff prison sentences, Commerce Secretary Donald Evans has said. Evans, who on Monday was leaving on his fourth and final trip to China as a member of Bush's Cabinet, said in an Associated Press interview that he wanted to learn first-hand what China was doing to fulfill promises to better enforce its intellectual property laws. Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi led a 70-person delegation to Washington last April for economic talks that resulted in a number of pledges by the Chinese on trade, including protections for U.S. copyrights. The Motion Picture Association estimates that its members lost up to $3.5 billion last year from movie pirates. China is considered the second worst offender behind Russia. Evans said even though the Chinese government had committed to specific steps to combat piracy, the United States was concerned about the lack of significant criminal prosecutions. He said the administration wants to see "jail time and tough criminal actions against those responsible for the thefts. ... We haven't seen enough evidence that this is happening yet." Evans said he would emphasize this point during meetings with Chinese leaders and in a speech Thursday at an intellectual property conference in Beijing. During Bush's second term, the United States will keep the pressure on China to abide by the market-opening commitments it made upon joining the World Trade Organization, Evans said. That effort, he said, would continue under Carlos Gutierrez, the president's nominee for commerce secretary. The head of cereal giant Kellogg is awaiting Senate approval to take over for Evans. Evans, a close friend of Bush, said in November he was leaving the Cabinet to return to Texas. Gutierrez told lawmakers last week that the administration intended to press China to narrow the trade gap with the United States. That imbalance hit $124 billion in 2003, a record for any U.S. trading partner, and widened in 2004. Critics of the administration's trade policies contend that Bush has not done enough to protect American workers from unfair trade practices in other nations. Those practices have contributed greatly to the loss of 2.7 million U.S. manufacturing jobs over the past four years, these critics say. In the interview, Evans said he was not disappointed by the growth in the overall trade deficit and the deficit with China. He said he saw it as "an ongoing challenge to make sure that we do all we can to eliminate not only tariff barriers but nontariff barriers with China." U.S. manufacturers say the best thing the administration could do for the industry would be to persuade China to stop linking its currency directly to the U.S. dollar. American companies say that as a result of that system, the Chinese yuan is undervalued by as much as 40 percent, giving Beijing a huge competitive advantage. Evans said currency issues would not come up directly in his conversations with Chinese leaders because Treasury Secretary John Snow was handling that policy matter for the administration. But Evans said he would raise with the Chinese the additional steps needed, such as selling off state-owned enterprises, so China can be classified by the United States as a market economy. The Chinese want this designation because it will make it harder for American companies to win claims that Chinese competitors are setting unfairly low prices on goods sold in the U.S. market. "It is very important to them to be classified as a market economy under our trade laws and they are not there yet," Evans said. Evans said all of these efforts to boost U.S. export sales to China would continue in Bush's second term. "I will make it clear that even though we have had a presidential election nothing has changed," he said. "We still want to continue working to integrate China into the global economy." Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2005/BUSINESS/01/09...e.ap/index.html The Counterfeit is the accident of the brand The counterfeit is at the origins of the Swiss watchmaking in the mid-18th century. A proof that a counterfeiter can become a master watchmaker. La Montre des origines au XIXe siècle by Catherine Cardinal January 03, 2005 By Pierre Maillard The mindless copy, or fake, or counterfeit object, is a real economic scourge. That goes without saying. But isn’t it also, in a way, the reverse side of the “brand” or what we might call the “counterbrandi” The French philosopher and science historian, Paul Virilio, theorized on what he calls the “accident.” Each new technology, he says, creates at the same time a new “accident” - its own particular accident. For example, by inventing the automobile, man also invented the automobile accident. By inventing the airplane, he also invented the air disaster. By inventing the Internet, there came the invention of online viruses, or worse, online paedophilia. The examples abound, from trivial to tragic. When the brand was invented, so was, to a certain degree, counterfeiting. The forgery is only interesting if what it copies is immediately recognizable. Why copy an object that does not have an exclusive identityi No one would be interested in it. People copy only those things that are worth copying. And, an object is worth it if it is a well-known label, a recognizable brand name. Brands spend treasures of energy patiently constructing their brand image, and treasure chests trying to impose this image on a global scale. Yet, the more powerful the brand becomes, the more it attracts counterfeiters. To be copied is, in a way, the proof of a brand’s success. What is the most copied brand in the world? Not by chance, it is the largest luxury brand on the planet, Louis Vuitton. What is the most copied watch brand in the world? The King Rolex, of course, and so on, and so on. In fact, if we made a list of the most copied watches, we would probably obtain more reliable and revealing statistics than those in the brands’ annual reports. Behind this, of course, is human frailty. Between us, let’s admit it, what consumer would want to transform himself into a white knight for the Brandi If the right occasion presents itself, there is a little larceny in all of us. The proof of the pudding can be seen in the recent misadventure of the Italian Foreign Minister, Franco Frattini. On an official visit to Beijing, he spent some time visiting Hong Qiao, also known as the “pearl market,” a famous or infamous “department store” for counterfeit products. The minister could not help himself. Looking at all the Cartiers and Rolexes selling for 20 euros, he gave in to temptation and bought one, a superb fake. As his luck would have it, there were a number of reporters present and they did not miss this photo opportunity. As usual, when prime minister Silvio Berlusconi was questioned about this during a press conference, standing next to the Chinese prime minister, Wen Jiabao, he simply kicked it into touch by declaring, “It seems logical to me that the minister responsible for speaking about the fight against counterfeiting would have to have tangible proof of its existence…” What a lame excuse! The reality is quite different. The minister Frattini had simply given in to his desire to get a ‘brand name’ watch for 20 euros. But the real stakes in this game are much more important. By copying, one learns. The Chinese began by copying, but they also are learning, and learning well. This year, three Chinese manufacturers introduced tourbillons, authentic tourbillons. Of course, they are a far cry from the tourbillons coming from Swiss haute horlogerie, but still… Look at what’s happening in Italy in the domain of the well-made, beautiful Italian shoe. This year, imports of real luxury shoes, Made in China, were greater than the home-grown variety. Behind the counterfeiter hides a future competitor. The counterfeit object can very well be considered to be the accident of the brand, the accident of creativity, and often, it is a fatal accident. Courtesy: europastar
  11. Did You Know??? In 1797 William Pitt, the English Prime Minister, introduced a tax on all privately owned watches and clocks in Great Britain. Because of Britain's financial difficulties a whole new set of taxes had to be introduced. By November 1797, Britain had a budget deficit of £22 million. Because of the tax on watches and clocks many people were unable to afford the five shilling duty to keep a clock or pocket watch and relied on the clocks in taverns for the time. The clocks in taverns acquired the new name of “Act of Parliament Clocks”. The Tavern clocks were driven by a weight and had a long pendulum, like a grandfather clock. The dial was very large, 2 – 3 feet in diameter, some dials were as wide as 5 feet. The tavern owners were happy to pay the tax because their clock attracted customers. The tax was only in force for 9 months but the loss of business and hardship caused to clockmakers forced Pitt to repeal the Act. - Breguet’s most famous watch was the “Marie-Antoinette” watch The watch was commissioned for Marie-Antoinette. Unfortunately, Marie-Antoinette never saw the watch as her head had been cut off 34 years before the watch was completed. She was 37 years old. The watch had every complication known at the time. Work on the watch started in 1783 and was finally completed in 1827, four years after Breguet's death. The watch eventually ended up in the L.A. Mayer Institute in Jerusalem. It was stolen in April, 1968 and hasn’t been seen since. - There are not 365 Days in a Year There are roughly 365.25 days in a year. That is an increase of ¼ of a day each year that is not shown on the calendar. After 4 years of additional ¼ days the calendar is ahead by 1 full day. A day is added to the calendar every 4 years to compensate for this additional day that has accumulated. The year that occurs every 4 years with the additional day (February 29) is called a LEAP YEAR. - A blue moon is the second full moon in a calendar month. For a blue moon to occur, the first of the full moons must appear at, or near, the beginning of the month so that the second will fall within the same month (the average span between two moons is 29.5 days). July 2004 will have two full moons: the first on July 2, the second on July 31—that second full moon is called the Blue Moon. Two full moons in one month may occur in any month out of the year except for February, which is shorter than the lunar cycle. The last blue moon occurred on Nov. 30, 2001. An older definition for the blue moon is recorded in early issues of the Maine Farmer's Almanac. According to this definition, the blue moon is the third full moon in a season that has four full moons. But will it really be blue? Probably not. The date of a full moon, all by itself, doesn't affect the moon's color. The moon on July 31st will be pearly-gray, as usual. The COSC uses 5 positions for certification 6:00 o'clock up 3:00 o'clock up 9:00 o'clock up Dial down Dial up 8° Centigrade ( 46.4° Fahrenheit) 23° Centigrade ( 73.4° Fahrenheit) 38° Centigrade (100.4° Fahrenheit) It is often quoted that to pass certification the watch must have a mean daily rate of a minimum of -4 seconds and a maximum of +6 seconds. It is actually much more complicated than this simplistic guideline. Larger calibers would produce better results than smaller calibers because the larger parts could be manufactured more precisely than smaller parts. The COSC Observatory in Geneva had 4 testing categories: [*]Deck chronometers between 43 and 70 mm. [*]Pocket chronometers between 38 and 43 mm. [*]Pocket chronometers less than 38 mm. [*]Chronometer wristwatch Source: http://www.time4watches.com/Watch%20Articl...20positions.htm Why do watch ads set the time at 10:10? First of all, the 10:10 position does not block out the watch company’s name or logo. In this position the hands act as a frame for the name or logo. Some watches have the model name or some lettering such as the chronometer rating at the bottom section of the dial. There are watches that have a subdial for the seconds hand at the 6:00 o’clock position and indicating the time as 10:10 does not interfere with any of these. Some companies have started using 10:08 or 10:12 as the time shown on the watch in their ads. This stops the longer minute hand from blocking out the numeral or marker at the 2:00 o’clock position. On a chronograph with subdials at 3:00 o'clock and/or 9:00 o'clock 5:08 or 6:53 may be used to frame one of the subdials without blocking the watch company's name or logo. In addition, when the hands are in the 10:10 position they form a “smiley” face instead of a “frown” that would be portrayed if the time is set at 8:20. Source: http://www.time4watches.com/Watch%20Articl...%20in%20ads.htm
  12. @NRG You're missing the point... This is an archive from our sister site... It is being brought here in it's original format and posting... It is for the reader to explore... Nothing about "indexing" is relevant... One can casually browse the pages to mine its worth, or when one uses the "Search" function they may be surprised... If the Thread bothers you then simply quit reading it... TT PS: I am however through with the transferring of headers... We all know who the OP is by now...
  13. Posted by: Neo Jan 10 2005, 07:23 AM Is a quartz watch with a sweep second hand different from an automatic? There are quite a few issues here but perhaps I can comment on a few of the more salient considerations. Quartz watch drive systems are much lower in inertia compared to mechanicals. One of the reasons why Accutrons are not being made today is because this hybrid intermediary inertia system could not be sufficiently developed to overcome some of the major problems. With today's battery technology Accutrons SHOULD be feasible but alas ... If you look carefully at any mechanical watch with an operating frequency below 32,400 vph you will see that there is a barely perceptible rebound (backwards) movement to the second hand. Unlike tower clocks whose second hands are damped in their forward movement, most watch second hands are undamped to some degree. This puts a piece of metal in motion to bang up against another piece of metal (not counting detent chronometers of course where the banging metal occurs internally and the second hand is released not revolved). This banging is what creates the second hand jitter which is additional to the stuttering movement. In a quartz watch the second hand is propelled forward by a pulse like a regulator clock in a school or train station. The second hand is ultralight nowadays (unlike a mechanical system with a second hand which "balances" part of the escapement inertia and which would wiggle incredibly if it was ultralight). Even at higher movement rates the second hand on a quartz mechanism wouldn't look like the second hand on a mechanical watch. In addition mechanical watches tick. The ticking effect is real, just watch the reaction of a puppy to a loud mechanical alarm clock that it can have for its own. With the right teething handle on the clock the puppy may want to carry it around "for company". So do puppies prefer tickers to digital pulse systems, well ... they used to. Now with lift activated "talking clocks" using the owners voice, the puppy would much prefer to carry the box "with the bigger dog's voice" around "for company" instead of the ticker. Mechanical watches can reassure the owner with sound and whenever wearers were unsure of their mechanical watches they used to put them up to their ear. This impulse reaction is fading from the culture due to quartz watches which are usually go-nogo systems. There used to be watchmakers with failing eyesight who could diagnose movement problems simply by listening to the movement. So the real issue here is what people's expectations are with quartz watches and could they be fulfilled. The 1/10 second quartz module already exists and could easily be incorporated into a watch. Jaeger and Seiko both have prototypes and test runs in the field for testing. The battery isn't a problem although the cost for the new tooling is a consideration. The smooth flowing second hand of the Accutron did have its fans. A watch made for Lucien Piccard had a vibration rate of 39,600 vph and it's second hand seemed to flow as well (although it is a real pain to regulate). There will be enough fans to make this specialized second hand a reality. Will it overcome a fascination with ticking that humans have become conditioned to expect over the last 500+ years, I don't know. Eventually it may, but there are still ticking, ringing tower clocks all over Europe. People will still have grandfather and cuckoo clocks in their homes. For the next hundred years or so people may grow up (and thus be conditioned from childhood) in the presence of a ticker. Minus this reassurance humans can feel a loss. Most likely when we have talking response devices that tell us the time (and other things, from birth, when we whack them, as sort of a baby's minute repeater with mama's voice) only then will the mechanical ticker become less interesting and thus more forgotten. All transition periods are like this. The difference between tube sound and transistors led some companies to "add" rounding distortion to their "sound" to retain customers who complained about the dryness of transistor sound. When CDs began to replace vinyl people claimed there was something lost although they acknowledged something was gained. We humans need accurate timekeeping to run our complex daily lives. In reality we don't need a constant reminder of the passing seconds, but constant movement reassures us that this important device is working, easing our insecurities. The 4 second attention span of the MTV generation makes this amount of time about the limit of our patience when we are determining if our "device" is working (which is why Nintendo had to keep attention getting messages onscreen as game programs loaded, or the audience thought the game player had broken). There is nothing intrinsically "bad" about a one second pulse rate. Old slow-beat fusee movement watches had 1 or 2 pulse per second advance rates for their second hands. What is funnier was the clutch connected second hand which could be stopped while the hour and minute hand continued to move correctly. The second hand was only there as an accessory. I'm sure there will be watches with quartz drives and flowing second hands available soon (so please write your favorite watch company, except of course Blancpain, to hurry them along). This will be a niche market item. It will out-MTV MTV. If the 1/10 second pulse interval is visible (unlike the synchronous motor clock second hand which flows at 60 pulses per second) we might be able to respond to the pulses which fascinate us. Like watching the activity of ants frantically building nests, collecting food and fighting for territory, the pulsed/flowing second hand may intrigue enough humans to inspire its own fan base in the market. Source: http://www.time4watches.com/WatchKing/quar...eep_seconds.htm
  14. Posted by: Neo Jan 10 2005, 07:08 AM Gold Content in Watches Since the earliest watches were produced in Europe, gold has been used for adornment or to improve the operation of the movements. In a few cases pure, 24 karat gold was used. Gold has certain chemical and mechanical properties that make it useful in watch manufacturing and use. Gold oxidizes very slowly if at all. Gold's softness and malleability make it easy to form and to some extent it is self-lubricating. Gold takes a high polish and retains it. Gold also produces almost no allergic reactions in people. Gold is very dense so in some cases it can be used as a substantial weight on an autowinding rotor to improve winding energy. Gold was one of the first metals to be purified and it's chemical and mechanical properties were well known to Renaissance and earlier scientists. Some of the properties that made gold useful also caused problems for its users and owners. A pure gold watch case might look great but with any stress it is easily marred or dented. Parts that were heavily used, like the winding crown, could easily wear out, becoming useless in a short period of time. Various other watch parts like hunter case lid latches were not feasible to make out of pure gold. In fact pure gold has had very few uses in watchmaking. There have been some notable exceptions to that rule. Mido put a 24 karat gold plating on the cases of some of their watch models and boasted about it by marking each one "24kt gold plated". This was unusual because 100% gold plate did not usually adhere well to other metals. Mido's special plating process was unique in this respect. These watches were some of the least allergenically interactive watches ever made and were produced in dress watch styles so that wearers would be unlikely to put hard use on them. Before stainless steel and nickel plates were readily available for watches, a chemical process called "gold washing" was developed to put a very light pure gold plating onto brass watch surfaces to reduce oxidation on the watch's internal parts. This process worked so well that many watches produced in the 1700s and 1800s have brass plates still glistening with their pure gilt "washing". The color of pure gold is almost orange/green and it identifies the Mido watches and gold washed plates using it. In a few cases pure gold gears were used in watch movements but this was not done often as gold's shock integrity is low and such gears deformed easily. Alloys of gold though, have been used extensively in modern watches. The Karat System The karat system based on increments of 1/24th parts is very old and has been retained by the gold processing industry because of its universality. In Europe this old system of purity measurement has been codified with percentages as well. For example 14 karat gold is 14/24th gold and 10/24th other metals. In Europe it is also known as .585 gold and it is often hallmarked as such. Other popular karat designations and their percentage hallmarks are 22 karat (.917), 20 karat (.830), 18 karat (.750), 10 karat (.415) and 9 karat (.375). In every case the percentage designation is the amount of gold in the metallurgical alloy of gold, so that 18 karat gold is in fact 75% gold and 25% other metals. These percentages refer to the amount of gold by WEIGHT not volume. 23 karat gold rotors have often been used on very high-end watch rotors to increase the winding efficiency. Being very dense and not subject to much oxidation from oil contamination these rotors are very heavy for their size and will remain brilliant and shiny for very long periods of time. This is especially important if the rotor is intricately engraved, as cleaning will often dull the finish and the finely carved or scored surface cannot be buffed or polished. In this case the alloy is produced by "doping" the pure gold with as hard of a metal as is metallurgically possible. The most common doping materials are palladium, silver, copper or iridium. Palladium and iridium are very hard and will mix reasonably well with molten gold. These metals will also not dull the final alloy the way titanium or tungsten metals would. 23 karat gold has often been used in coinage because it is much harder than pure gold but it has only a small amount of other precious metals in the alloy. Although 23 karat gold is perhaps three or four times as hard as pure gold it is still soft compared to almost any other metal and so it's use is limited in watchmaking. 22 karat gold and 20 karat gold alloys have been used extensively in case manufacturing. In some cases gold jewel seating cups have been made of 20+ karat gold to resist oxidation and also because the jewel cups will fit more completely into the jewel seat if the gold is very soft. The small rings of gold often seen in pre-1890 American railroad pocket watches were often made of "soft" gold alloys. Although it is unusual to use 22 karat gold in other parts of the watch there is a notable exception. Certain watch companies that made engraved or florentined dials (like Snyder) preferred using 22 or 23 karat gold in them. The intention was to be able to create an intricate pattern on the dial, which might even have the appearance of a woven texture. Since these dials could never be brushed or touched after being made, 22/23 karat gold was chosen as the dial base and surface medium because it would remain in the final state of its textured finish for hundreds of years. To clean the dial finish it was only necessary to dip the dial in a chemical bath with ultrasonic impulse vibration and loose dirt and fibers floated away. Zenith produced thousands of gold-cased watches with gold dials with the Movado brand during the years 1969-1972. These watches with their engraved dials are every bit as striking and beautiful as the day they left the Zenith factory. Red Gold, White Gold, Green Gold and Rose Gold Harder alloys of gold begin to have different purposes in watchmaking once other metals make up 25% of the weight of the "gold" and substantially more of it's volume. The following descriptions of the qualities and liabilities of various 18 karat gold alloys may be used a as a guide to the qualities and liabilities of 14, 12, 10 and 9 karat gold alloys. Obviously the content of non-gold metals BY WEIGHT is much greater proportionally but the general features are the same. These descriptions are meant as a rough guide to understanding gold alloys using 18 karat forms as examples. Using 18 karat red gold as an example we can see how this works. 18 karat red gold has approx. 1/4 of it's weight in copper and 3/4 of it's weight in gold. Because gold is 3.1 times as dense as copper the amount of copper in 18 karat red gold by volume is greater than that of the gold. Red gold is a good subject for discussion as well, because many people are allergic to copper metal directly on the skin and so 18 karat red gold produces rashes in some people who wear wristwatch cases made of this material. Pocket watch cases are usually not worn directly in contact with skin and so the allergy problem is greatly reduced. "Black Hills Gold" that is red in color is often a natural alloy of gold and copper. Inside a watch, 18 karat red gold might be used for decorative jewel cups because its color might be interesting to the maker decoratively. Copper adds considerable hardness to gold, pure copper has been readily available for thousands of years and the two metals alloy well together. Solid 18 karat red gold gears are often used in watches with gold trains because such gears are self-lubricating. Brass and steel gears are often plated with various karat gold not only to protect from oxidation but to provide a degree of lubrication as well. For this reason many of the gears (or wheels) used in pocket watches with solid gold trains were made of 18 karat red gold. Many 18 karat alloys of gold are available using other metal alloys to produce a wide range of different hardnesses and colors. 18 karat white gold is a very common jewelry material and is often used in watch cases and bracelets. By weight it is usually 75% gold, 3% silver, 12.5% palladium and 9.5% copper. This makes white 18 karat gold about the costliest to make because palladium is very expensive. With such a large amount of palladium in the gold it is also a very hard form of gold and thus wears well. Only 18 karat green gold is harder amongst common forms. White gold has only 12.5% copper and silver combined and these metals can cause allergic or poisonous reactions in many people, so this form of 18 karat gold is one of the least allergenic. 18 karat white gold polishes well and also resists scratching. It's weight and subtle coloring makes it a popular case material for high-end watches. White gold is also one of the two most dense colors of gold. 18 karat green gold is one of the least common alloys of gold and is available most widely in "Black Hills Gold" products. The composition of 18 karat green gold makes it the hardest form of 18 karat gold normally available. 18 karat green gold is an alloy using 75% gold, 2% silver, 3% palladium, 5% copper and 15% chrome. Chrome has a blue cast in its pure form and it is a very hard metal on its own. Chrome causes some severe allergic reactions so the use of green gold in watch cases has been limited but there have been some watch cases made from this material by Longines, Ardath, Elgin, Hamilton, Waltham and Patek Philippe. Although 18 karat green gold will polish to a mirror-like finish and it will resist scratching very well, the color is not very fashionable and the possibility of allergic reactions has limited its use in watch cases. 18 karat rose gold is an alloy usually produced by mixing 75% gold, 16% copper and 9% silver together. This type of gold alloy is very fashionable and thus is frequently used in jewelry and watch cases. Rose gold has often been used in solid 18 karat watch gears as well. Were it not for one physical and two psychological factors that make yellow gold the most popular, rose gold would likely be the most popular. As it stands in today's market, rose gold is slightly less popular than white gold. Rose gold has a very high copper content and this can cause some allergic reactions. Although it is not as common to have allergic reactions to rose gold as with red gold, there are many more reactions than there are with white gold. In addition, silver is actually poisonous and rose gold contains much more silver than white gold. These physical factors make rose gold slightly less popular than white gold in the market. NOTE: Base Metal Content percentages may vary slightly with each manufacturer. Yellow Gold The most popular forms of 18 karat gold are both yellow. One form of popular 18 karat yellow gold is light yellow in color and it has the psychological advantage of looking like what people think pure gold should look like. Although this form of yellow gold is much "whiter" than real 24 karat gold, it is people's perceptions that shape their buying. For many years brass objects were gold plated to reduce oxidation and improve the surface sheen. This type of plated material looked very orange, almost like real 24 karat gold. This color of gold developed an image of being "cheap" and tacky. Lower karat forms of "pure" gold had a high silver content but consumers perceived the solid low karat gold color to be superior because this material was solid and the color went through and through as well as never tarnishing or oxidizing. The light yellow form of 18 kart gold has a metal content with 75% gold, 16% silver and 9% copper. The disadvantage of this type of yellow gold is that it's silver content is the highest of all 18 karat gold. This high silver content makes it very soft and scratchable and more likely to trigger a poisonous reaction in some people. Light yellow 18 karat gold is also the densest form of 18 karat gold and so if weight is a factor this is the preferred alloy. The biggest problem that occurs in watch cases using this type of gold involves bent or cut lugs. Metal watch bracelets and spring bars can rip this form of gold and lugs will bend very easily. If the public's perception wasn't so firmly entrenched in favor of this color of gold, it would have few physical characteristics that would make it the most popular color. This color of gold is so dominant in the wedding band industry, that it is the most readily available form of 18 karat gold now and it will continue to be so for many years to come. The second form of yellow 18 karat gold is very popular because it really does look more like 24 karat gold than any other form. This type of gold alloy is made up of 75% gold, 12.5% silver and 12.5% copper. This type of yellow gold scratches less easily than the light colored form of yellow gold and it is more orange in color. This is the second most common form of 18 karat gold although 18 karat white gold is fast approaching it in popularity. This form of yellow gold is the second most dense and yet it is measurably harder than the other form of yellow gold because of the hardness added by copper. This means that if a watch case is made to be water resistant or exceptionally thin the darker and more orange form of yellow gold will be better because of its greater structural integrity. We forget that case hardened copper can be made so hard that battle swords were made from it 5,000 years ago. Buyers of high-end watch brands often prefer the darker form of yellow 18 karat gold also because they know it more closely resembles the color of 23 karat gold coins. This means that watch cases made from the darker color of yellow gold will last longer than the lighter colored alloy. In any case, yellow gold so totally dominates the market that this color in total is twice as popular as all the other forms combined in terms of total market share. There have been experiments in the production of other colors of gold but there seems to be almost no market for blue or violet color gold although there are some rare earth metal forms of violet gold that are available in Black Hills Gold products. In the industrial market there are some unusual forms of 18 karat gold alloys that have found their way into the watch case market. 18 karat gold that has a very high percentage of titanium is by far the hardest gold alloy form available. It's color is rather dark compared to most other forms of yellow 18 karat gold. Titanium is not considered a precious metal and silver is. Making gold alloys with non-precious metals is common since copper is almost always used in gold alloys, but this is because copper is in the gold family and mixes well itself with gold as well as allowing other metals to mix well with gold. Titanium adds a "light' feel to gold that can be disconcerting to consumers. It's 18 karat alloy is thus used most commonly as a form of 18 karat gold plating. It adheres well to most metals and is remarkably scratch resistant. Unfortunately 18 karat gold made with titanium as a doping material does not polish well, requiring special diamond grits and long periods of buffing because of the alloy's hardness. This processing consideration also has discouraged the watch case makers from using it too often. NOTE: Base Metal Content percentages may vary slightly with each manufacturer. Since the color of gold has become part of the consumer psychology gold has been used as a covering on other materials to decoratively enhance them and to reduce allergic reactions. There have been three basic ways that a gold surface has been applied to a base metal watch case: gold-filling, rolled gold plate gold electroplating. Rolled gold plate is similar except that the sheets of base metal are thicker proportionally. In these first two cases the multi-metal material is made first and then the "blanks" are formed into the desired case shape afterwards. Gold electroplating involves making a case out of a base metal first and then etching the case so that it will accept an even layer of karat gold (the "gold" layer's thickness is usually measured in microns). "Resist" can be applied to those portions of the case where gold plating is not desirable. If 18 - 24 karat gold plate is to be applied there is sometimes an intermediary step of "electro-blasting" tiny copper nodules onto the base metal before the plating process is undertaken. This will help the softer gold platings to adhere to the case material. When a watch case has only a thin layer of gold alloy on it's surface the rule is "the harder the better". Gold is very soft, even 9 karat green gold (which is one of THE hardest gold alloys) is much softer than steel and many other kinds of base metal. This means that the gold alloy on the surface of the case will wear off fairly easily. This also means that a heavy 10 karat gold plating or filling on a watch may last substantially longer than an 18 karat plating or filling. The reality is that the amount of actual gold in watch case with a plated or filled surface is so insignificant that the real value in the gold finish, involves how long it will last and look attractive. In this case the reverse of normal buying psychology should be employed. The lower gold content in 9 or 10 karat gold makes them better for plated or filled cases because they will stand up to daily use without wearing through quickly. Unfortunately the high percentage content of other metals in 9 or 10 karat gold may trigger allergic responses in some people. Pitting is also a possibility not only in gold-filled or plated surfaces but also even with solid 9, 10, 12 or 14 karat gold. Certain acids produced by the body or found in industry will actually attack the base metals in gold alloys. If the gold plating is very thin (less than 10 microns) it is possible for oxidation to come through the gold surface material. Gold is dense but can be porous. The psychological desirability of gold finishes goes back in human interest for thousands of years. The gold tomb ornaments of the early Egyptians still enthrall tourists who see them. Even though 18 karat white gold is costlier and contains more precious metal than 18 karat yellow gold, the yellow versions are definitely more popular. Gold finishes and solid karat gold cases give watch buyers a "feeling" of luxury. If buyers are aware of the realities of gold and gold alloys, it will be possible to make a better decision about buying watches with gold finishes. The actual amount of gold in most watches is only a small portion of their retail value. A watch with 3 ounces of 18 karat gold used in its manufacture will likely retail for more than $5,000, while the value of the gold will be less than $750. This same watch made of all stainless steel, will likely cost 40%. This shows us the fascination humans have with gold. The old adage is that "gold doesn't lose its lustre", both a fact of science and a comment on the psychology of gold. Chart of Atomic mass along with equivalent volumes of other metals Element|Atomic Mass|Volume vs Gold Gold|197|1:1 Iridium|192.2|1:1.02 Silver|107.9|1:1.83 Palladium|106.4|1:1.85 Copper|63.5|1:3.1 Chrome|52|1:3.8 Titanium|47.9|1:4.1 Source: http://www.time4watches.com/WatchKing/Gold...%20Part%204.htm
  15. Posted by: Neo Jan 9 2005, 01:48 PM Ulysse Nardin - Freak ref. 016-88 by Marcus Hanke © text: M. Hanke; © pics: Ulysse Nardin and M. Hanke Products of the 'haute horlogérie' normally receive names that reflect their luxury, uniqueness and tradition. That Ulysse Nardin dubbed a very expensive watch "Freak", certainly was met with some astonishment. However, as soon, as we held that product in our hands, we realized that this name was well deserved. A watch that features no hands showing the time, but where the movement itself serves that purpose; a manual-winding watch, which features no crown to wind it or to set the hands; all the conventions that have been accepted as being the traditional base of mechanical watches, seemingly have been ignored. And whoever thought that a watch like the "Freak" can be produced in a conventional manner, will learn the contrary now: The complete production time of a "Freak" is six weeks, but of this, the actual assembly needs but two days. In order to understand this, one has to know the really freaky way of how a "Freak" is made: The watch case is like a 'sandwich', that consists of several parts, rotating within each other. Between them, gaskets and Teflon-coated gliding surfaces are responsible for water tightness and perfect function. Additionally, the case includes the internal teethed thread necessary for the movement of the 'minute bridge'. The case assembly is done by some members of the team, and water tightness and the correct dimensions are tested without the movement mounted inside the case. Separately assembled is also the mainspring barrel, which is fixed on the caseback, with its hour wheel and the 'bridge', which by its rotation shows the hours. It is held by the teethed rack on the case's inside. As a next step, this sub-assembly is mount into the case, and all the measurements and its proper working is tested, without the rest of the movement added. The "Freak's" movement itself is the small "baguette" with its wheels and the arrowhead, showing the minutes. It consists of a baseplate, the wheels and their bridge, the escapement with another small bridge atop, and the balance wheel with its large cock. The different members of UN's "Freak team" each assemble their proper movements, and mount them into their proper watches. But before, the movements are tested and adjusted. Yes, you are reading correctly: The Freak movements are adjusted outside their cases, since once the cases are closed, no further adjustment is possible without complete disassembly of the case. Each movement is put on a specific stand and fed with energy by a small motor drive. There, they are tested for accuracy and amplitude. A laser is used for this purpose, since the traditional methods, mostly with sensible microphones, are not applicable with the Freak. Thus, the Freak movements pass a "curing time" on their stands, until they finally are mounted into their cases. A "Freak" movement in its assembly stand Amplitude testing with a laser Afterwards, the case is closed. Then follows the final testing, ensuring that the movement's regulation outside the case is still okay, once the movement is encased. This happens over two periods of eight days each. During the first eight days, the watch is tested in different static positions, and during the latter, it is moved on a watch winder. The reason for this strict testing is, of course, the fact that once the case is closed, no adjustment is possible. As a consequence, all is done to keep the risk of maladjusted movements as small as possible. Those of you happy to call a "Freak" their own now know that "freaky" is not only appropriate as a description of their watch's appearance, but also of its peculiar manufacturing process. I want to sincerely thank Ulysse Nardin's technical director, Mr. Pierre Gygax, for supplying my with all the valuable insights! Source: http://www.tp178.com/mh/freak_production/freak_prod.html Posted by: Neo Jan 9 2005, 01:50 PM Welcome to the FREAK Show !! Text and pictures © Ulysse Nardin The Freak openly displays everything. Every single part of the mechanical movement is visible. The two bridges indicate hours and minutes. Resetting is effected by turning the top bezel. While the mainspring barrel rotates, the fixed rack transmits its power to the movement. The hour wheel arbor is mounted on the blue mainspring barrel. The wheel rolls in the fixed rack and drives the centre-pinion. The grey bridge rotates once in 12 hours and is used as hour hand, too. The Carrousel-Tourbillon movement is assembled onto the centre-pinion. Its first wheel rolls on the fixed rack and gathers the necessary power to maintain the oscillation of the balance. « DUAL DIRECT » How does this escapement work? Step 1: The BALANCE is about to move the STOPPER and to unlock the 1st WHEEL. Step 2: When the BALANCE passes its neutral position, the 1st WHEEL is freed and accelerates in order to catch up with the Balance IMPULSE TOOTH. Step 3: The 1st WHEEL gives an impulse onto the Balance IMPULSE TOOTH. Step 4: The BALANCE rides along its free arc, the 2nd WHEEL sits against the STOPPER. Step 5: The BALANCE returns to move the STOPPER and unlock the 2nd WHEEL. Step 6: The BALANCE passes its neutral position, the 2nd WHEEL is freed and accelerates in order to catch up with the Balance IMPULSE TOOTH. Step 7: The 2nd WHEEL gives an impulse onto the Balance IMPULSE TOOTH. Step 8: The BALANCE rides along its free arc, the 1st WHEEL sits against the STOPPER. And this is how the whole process appears in motion: (Animation sequence delayed, to make the detection of the various phases a bit easier) Source: http://www.tp178.com/mh/freak_works/freak_works.html
  16. Posted by: Neo Jan 9 2005, 01:00 PM Manufaketure By TED C. FISHMAN The New York Times, January 9, 2005 Most of the pharmacies in China that dispense Western-style medicines have an antiquated, if reassuring, air about them. There are no posters on the walls for brand-name drugs. Candy is not for sale. Photo processing is not available. Druggists work in long white lab coats and surgical hats that could have been salvaged from a World War II hospital ship. Some pharmacies require prescriptions for the most potent drugs, others only an earnest chat with a druggist. Drug orders create paperwork that passes through three or four bureaucratic layers before reaching the solemn cashier, who issues a handwritten receipt. Such an old-fashioned scene might argue for just how far China trails the United States and other advanced economies, where both science and marketing are seemingly years ahead. Yet these pharmacies also represent a current and urgent battleground in one of the most important struggles between the developed world and China's surging economic power. This is the fight over intellectual property and the related investments essential to the knowledge economy, that amorphously defined new world in which better ideas, not faster, cheaper hands create jobs and wealth. Despite their appearances, Chinese pharmacies are stocked with expertly copied versions of some of the world's most profitable medicines, patented products that generate hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of business in the United States, Europe and Japan. Even the very latest miracle drugs sell in China for a fraction, often one-tenth or less, of what their authorized equivalents in the United States cost. Foreign companies lose control of their goods in two related ways: to counterfeiters who copy products and then sell them under different or altered brand names, and to pirates who make look-alikes and try to pass them off as the real thing. Using a lost-sales calculus, which measures the losses to foreign companies by determining the value of the dubious goods sold, the U.S. Department of Commerce estimates that American companies, as a result of counterfeiting and piracy, lose between $20 billion and $24 billion annually. The Japanese sacrifice even more: $34 billion. Throw in the sales lost by the European Union, and the cumulative losses for the three economic blocs approach $80 billion. While losses to American and other advanced economies are high, China's appropriation and dissemination of the world's most valuable products and technologies, if they continue unabated, will ultimately mean a lot more than dollars lost. China's pirating and counterfeiting could radically change the way entertainment, fashion, medicine and services are created and sold. The companies, big and small, that Americans work for could be weakened. Chinese practices might reduce the prices of what we buy, by undermining the powerful companies that now control essential but expensive goods like drugs and computer software -- or these practices might, should China's unwillingness to accede to American copyright demands ignite trade wars, drive prices up. A U.S. consular official in China who requested anonymity -- few American officials are willing to speak openly about sensitive issues relating to China -- told me: ''Nothing has a higher priority in our trade policy than the fight to protect American intellectual property. It is every bit as important an effort for us as the war against weapons of mass destruction.'' The analogy has some merit. As with stolen bombs, the chief worry about losing control over intellectual property is not that American manufacturers will forego sales opportunities; the fear is that its new ''owners'' will turn our own innovations back on us and inflict much broader economic damage. For the United States, the world's most formidable producer and exporter of invention, entertainment and trademarked brands, the stakes are highest. William H. Lash III, the Commerce Department official who is leading a new initiative to change China's practices, vows that the Bush administration will take ''whatever means are necessary'' to force a change. What makes China so troubling for American and other foreign companies is that the country is both a potential rival, with an alternative legal approach to intellectual property that limits their prospects in China and weakens their competitive strength globally, and a haven for pirates and counterfeiters. Start with the damage that fake drugs, for example, can do. Whether well made or poorly, they knock the genuine thing out of the market. According to the Chinese government-run press, hundreds of thousands of people in China have died from fake drugs that are either toxic or do not contain the active ingredients that users need. Drug companies report an increased threat from counterfeits entering the legitimate supply chains around the world. John Theriault, a 26-year veteran of the F.B.I. who now helps orchestrate anticounterfeiting efforts on behalf of Pfizer, says the company, working with Chinese authorities, has ''seized millions of units of counterfeit pharmaceuticals and thousands of kilos of compounds'' used to make them. In the worst cases, the fakes are commingled with legitimate products. ''You might have 2 bad pills mixed in with 28 good ones,'' he says. (In May 2003, 200,000 bottles that had been sold in U.S. pharmacies and that contained counterfeits of Lipitor, Pfizer's cholesterol-lowering pill, were recalled.) Fakes ''can ruin a brand and ruin a company,'' Theriault says. But if bad imitations are a big problem, good imitations may be a bigger one. Pfizer happens also to be a prime example of what is arguably the most serious threat to U.S. knowledge-based companies in China: its intellectual-property rules. In the case of drugs manufactured before China agreed (in order to join the World Trade Organization) to adopt patent standards closer to the international norm, production continues as before -- that is, without any licensing fees paid to Western companies. Even today, however, Chinese companies, many of them government-run, simply continue to ''reverse engineer'' -- that is, take the known ingredients and work backward to figure out a process that produces accurate copies of -- the drugs (including recent blockbusters) and pay the foreign patent holders nothing. Increasingly, China's pharmaceutical companies are rushing to claim patents for their copies before foreign patent owners can assert their rights. This is what happened with Pfizer's Viagra, which has multiple Chinese imitators: the Chinese authorities denied patent protection for Pfizer and opened the market to Chinese knockoffs instead. (Pfizer is appealing.) Press coverage in China of the Viagra decision made a point of noting that one Viagra pill costs 1 yuan to make, or around 12 cents, yet it sells for 98 yuan, or about $12. That sort of difference is sure to pique the attention of margin-squeezing Chinese manufacturers -- and perhaps encourage more copycats to rush into the market. Selling Chinese-made Viagra could turn a company into a future pharmaceutical Goliath, which would please China's rulers. Certainly China also has a public health incentive to see that drug prices are affordable for its people, who earn on average one-fortieth of what Americans do and who rarely have health insurance. China's strategy often works: the fear of knockoffs entering the market drives the price of the patented drug down, and many important drugs cost less there than they do nearly everywhere else in the world. (Historically, medicines lacking patent protection, either because a time limit has expired or because countries like India or China simply offer no such protection, can experience price drops of more than 90 percent.) The threat to American interests is not hard to identify. According to the Milken Institute, Big Pharma employs 400,000 Americans directly, creates another 2.7 million jobs and contributes $172 billion to the U.S. economy. It is one of the most important engines of the knowledge economy; in 2003 the pharmaceutical industry invested $33.2 billion in drug research. That does not include the nearly $30 billion spent on life sciences by the publicly financed National Institutes of Health, which pays for research that leads to commercial drugs. Weaken the drug industry and you weaken one pillar of the U.S. economy. And Pfizer's trouble with Viagra in China demonstrates just how vulnerable the American knowledge economy is in a world where ideas ''protected'' by our laws trade freely nonetheless. Behind almost every blockbuster drug, killer software application or computer-chip design is a public infrastructure that has steered uncountable sums and the country's best talents toward their creation. Consider what an advanced economy like ours does best: make movies, produce television shows watched from Helsinki to Cape Town, turn out global pop stars. We design the software and processes that streamline the operations of giant retail chains and global high-tech manufacturers. We engineer advanced engines and the guts of the world's computers. We devise brands, durable corporate identities and fashions. We conjure new ways to move money and put it to work. We turn the most basic tasks into knowledge work. Modern printers, to note one example, rely heavily on the most advanced automated presses, computerized design tools and management and shipping for delivering materials efficiently to consumers and are as dependent on the latest software and technological innovations as a biotech lab. And those 2.8 million American workers who in recent years have lost their factory jobs? They don't learn new ways to use power tools. They are retrained in front of a computer; they learn to run the robots that do the jobs they used to do. The trouble with this apparently successful state of affairs is that the stuff we do best exists nowhere and everywhere at the same time. Some of our most valuable things -- software codes, pharmaceutical processes, car designs, digital movie files -- weigh nothing and, as e-mail attachments, can move at the speed of light. To learn American ideas and procedures is all but the same as owning them. (Unless, of course, laws successfully prohibit their co-option.) In contrast, most of what China makes that finds its way into the world market is physical. The Chinese can borrow and steal the designs to our best products all they want. For instance, 90 percent of all software running on Chinese computers has been pirated and bought openly in stores for around $3 a copy. But if Americans wanted to borrow and steal what China makes, we would have to march in with an army and commandeer Chinese factories and workers. Western powers and the Japanese tried that in the mid-19th and -20th centuries, respectively, and will not repeat the experiment. China, however, can in a sense colonize the developed world simply through careful study and a willingness to go its own way on intellectual-property protection. If China's commitment to wipe out commercial piracy and counterfeiting were judged by the laws that the country has on its books, the Chinese government would seem to be as strict as any. China has made a great show of cracking down in the past few years. Newspapers and television news programs regularly feature stories about government raids on massive counterfeiting operations. Hundreds of thousands of DVD's and dozens of duplicating machines seized here, a warehouse of CD's there and trucks full of sham designer handbags somewhere else. In December, China passed a much-awaited national law that criminalizes piracy and counterfeiting, allowing courts to jail violators for up to seven years; before, only civil penalties applied. The new law is unlikely to spur enforcement, however. And even if it does send people to prison, that may only prove a boon to the copycat economy. For example, just before Christmas, Sony announced the results of an investigation into Chinese operations that were daily turning out 50,000 fake PlayStation 2 game consoles and accessories: a container loaded with fake parts was found to have visited a prison in Shenzhen just long enough for inmates to assemble the parts. The Chinese themselves take it as given that powerful government interests stand behind the trade in counterfeit or pirated goods. What to foreigners may seem to be an aggressive action against a big piracy ring can look to the Chinese like a sort of St. Valentine's Day Massacre, where one powerful manufacturer uses police cover to eliminate a weaker one. As the legal code grows fatter, so, too, do the supply and sophistication of fake goods. The places they are sold no longer look like back-alley stalls but like Main Street retailers. Near Beijing's diplomatic row, two outdoor markets once famous for knockoff fashions have been combined into a large, bright department store-like building with escalators, tailors on site and merchants with business cards, international shipping accounts and full stocks of fake fashions, designer tableware, brand-name musical instruments and, of course, thousands upon thousands of fake Swiss watches. The most common punishment counterfeiters face is the confiscation of whatever products they have in stock. Sometimes a pitiful fine is levied. China's National Copyright Administration cites with much fanfare 52 raids on video shops in 2003, but the total fines amounted to $6,900, or an average of $132 for each offender. China's lax policies on copyright protection offer the country the advantages of both bread and circuses. Andrew Mertha, a political scientist at Washington University who has worked with Chinese and American officials on Chinese intellectual-property law, summarizes the circus side of things: ''If you're the Chinese leadership, do you want people idling around in the street, complaining about how unhappy they are, or do you want them home watching Hollywood movies?'' In other words, the government is slow to crack down on the piracy of entertainment products because these serve its social agenda. But is there any doubt that if vendors suddenly found a brisk market for DVD's promoting Tibetan independence or the virtues of Falun Gong, the outlawed religious sect, the DVD business would shrivel up overnight and all those anticounterfeiting laws on the books would find ready application? Indeed, when Sega's new online fantasy sports game ''Football Manager 2005'' had the gall to suggest that imaginary soccer leagues in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Tibet could be governed locally, rather than by the central government, China's Ministry of Culture banned the game on the grounds that it posed ''harm to the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity.'' Fines reached $3,600. Because the overwhelming majority of products pirated and counterfeited in China are, for now, sold mainly in China, they provide the Chinese people with ''bread'' insofar as they make all sorts of other goods affordable. Often, as in the case of medicines and medical devices, some foods, school textbooks and clothing, these counterfeit products are essential goods. Thus, any government crackdown is essentially a tax on China's needy consumers. Counterfeiters and pirates also serve the country by usurping the foreign technology that China needs to meet its ambitious industrial goals. In 2005, China will most likely be the world's third-largest trading nation, and counterfeiters give the country's increasing number of globally competitive companies the means to compete against powerful foreign rivals that pay for their use of proprietary technologies. In a broader geopolitical context, China's counterfeiters deny the world's advanced economies, especially in the U.S. and Japan, the opportunity to sell to China the valuable designs, trademarked goods, advanced technology and popular entertainment that the Chinese urgently desire but cannot yet produce on their own. Put another way, China's failure to police industry and to protect intellectual-property acts, in effect, like one of the greatest industrial subsidies in the world. Chinese manufacturers and industries freely exploit foreign ideas and technologies. ''China helps distribute technology that has already been paid for by the developed world, often by companies, but also by taxpayers who support the government labs where much of the most important industrial technology begins,'' says Oded Shenkar, a professor of business at Ohio State University and the author of the recent book ''The Chinese Century.'' ''And, seen as a subsidy, this one is a particularly good deal for the Chinese government because it doesn't have to pay for it.'' For the most part, China fears no repercussions from its actions because the size and potential of its markets give China an undiminished (for now) power to lure the world's most advanced technology to its shores. For example, China for years has tendered the prospect of large, advanced transportation projects to foreign governments as a way to coax largess and technology from outsiders. When the Chinese government announced that is was considering high-speed magnetic levitation (''maglev'') cross-country train routes, Germany and Japan each put together government and business alliances to win future contracts there. The German industrial giants ThyssenKrupp and Siemens formed a partnership to build a nearly 20-mile maglev line in Shanghai to prove that they were up to the job. The line began operating last year while China was said to be considering which of several technologies to use. In December, workers for the German operation videotaped Chinese engineers poking around the maglev train's maintenance building in Shanghai at 3 a.m. one Saturday, apparently in search of confidential information. The manager of the Chinese operation that was a partner of the Germans clumsily excused the prowlers by saying they were merely taking part in a ''research and development'' exercise. Later that month, the government said that to save money it would eschew foreign designs for Chinese trains and, instead, employ newly developed indigenous maglev technology. Soon China could be exporting maglev trains for half the price Germany or Japan demand. The generous and optimistic view of China's behavior is that it is a passing phase, and one not all that unusual for countries on the make. European powers once struggled to steal (and even transplant) one another's prime proprietary assets, like Mesoamerican gold, Brazilian rubber and Indonesian cloves. Blue-and-white Delftware was a Dutch attempt to copy China's porcelain works. At the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, American companies paid industrial spies to steal the designs of British machines. American theatrical producers routinely staged foreign operas and plays without permission; publishers sold dubious editions of English novels. More recently, Taiwan circumvented foreign patents and copyrights early in its post-World War II industrialization drive. And countries in Southeast Asia, Latin America, Africa and the former Soviet Union still operate well outside the developed world's norm for intellectual-property protection. Yet no other violators, past or present, match China's potential to change the rules of the world economy through piracy and counterfeiting. Countries like Brazil or Vietnam may be as lax about copying as China is, but they do not have the industrial infrastructure or the ranks of skilled scientists and engineers to pull off the more ambitious copies of, say, drugs and automotive vehicles. China, however, has the expertise and infrastructure to reverse-engineer and produce nearly anything. And it has a market large enough to support the enterprise. The Chinese motorcycle industry provides a good example. Honda entered China in the 1980's and soon captured one-fifth of the motorcycle marketplace. But cheaper Chinese imitations appeared, and Honda's market share quickly halved. The company found that staying in China required that it enter into partnerships with some of the very companies copying its bikes. Now, with as many as 100 motorcycle makers in China, the country is the largest such manufacturer in the world, producing 15 million motorcycles a year (half of all new vehicles sold worldwide). Still the copying persists. The Japanese government estimates that of the 11 million motorcycles made in China in 2002, 9 million were imitations of Japanese products. Oded Shenkar, who has long studied the Chinese automobile industry, argues that China's current regime is an essential factor in the country's ability to produce goods cheaply and get them quickly to market. In the U.S., about $1,000 of the price of an average car goes to pay for that model's product development; that's money the car maker invested over the course of years. Copiers pay none of that and can rush their products to market. ''Almost everything you can think of that is made in China has a very low technology investment embedded in it,'' Shenkar says. ''Drugs, DVD's, every trademark, software and whole production lines get copied. Some of the technology is transferred to China by multinational corporations and one way or another finds its way to other producers; others are simply 'borrowed.' The practices feed one another. Why pay for software to run a production line that is itself an unauthorized copy of someone else's technology and processes?'' This sort of technological expropriation allows China to create industries nearly from scratch. Though it costs tens or hundreds of millions of dollars to develop new-model cars and motorcycles, China is home to hundreds of companies that produce the vehicles, many of them small companies with limited sales. ''You can't start an automobile company that sells a few thousand cars a year and still pay the $500 million or more it costs to develop a new model,'' Shenkar says. ''Where else in the world could a company that makes 30,000 units compete with one that makes a million units?'' The hopeful analogy that compares China with earlier, now-reformed ''borrowers'' simply ignores the scale of the long-term advantages that both encourage and result from China's copying. Unless it comes up with a remedy that forces China to change, the United States will have to find its own solutions. Ken DeWoskin, a professor emeritus of Chinese studies at the University of Michigan and a consultant who advises PricewaterhouseCoopers on China, argues that China, as in the Viagra case, will increasingly take on the veneer of an American-style intellectual-property regime while finding ways at every step to assert its interests within that system. ''American pharmaceutical companies will be very seriously attacked by China's approach to I.P.,'' DeWoskin says. ''You can already see how China is changing the rules of the game.'' Americans, he notes, pay higher drug prices than consumers in other economies can sustain, all for products made here at home. A result is that we underwrite both our companies and the rest of the world's consumption. How much American consumers will tolerate other kinds of similarly expensive economic nationalism is hard to predict, but DeWoskin says he can envision the U.S. economy slowly but surely adopting such measures, much as Japan has to protect its domestic markets and companies. Japan's economy is structured to support national industries over foreign rivals. Japanese consumers, for instance, typically pay more at home for goods manufactured in their own country than consumers outside pay for Japan's products. Without realizing it, Americans have already tilted toward the Japanese arrangement in pharmaceuticals. One approach that vulnerable companies trumpet is speeding up the pace of innovation and rushing their products to market before Chinese competitors can catch up. But this solution overlooks the extent to which the Chinese themselves are increasingly skilled at hurrying copycat goods to market. Another approach is to sell legitimate goods at lower prices. Already, China's loose intellectual-property protection has done what years of legal and political pressures on the software and pharmaceutical industries in the U.S. have failed to do: forced powerful American companies to rethink, and often reduce, their prices. Chinese and Indian drugs that fall outside Western-style patent protection are drastically cheaper in poorer countries. Microsoft recently introduced less expensive versions of its software in developing countries where patent and copyright protections are weak (though the company has yet to do so in China). Another approach to the Chinese intellectual-property regime is to leverage its vitality. The Japanese may be showing the way here too. In September, Toyota surprised the world's automobile makers by announcing that it would join with China's government-owned First Auto Works Corporation to start building its Prius hybrid cars in Jilin, a northeast Chinese province. The innovative Prius is one of the world's most sought-after cars -- why would Toyota bring its hottest technology to China where it is almost certain to be carefully studied and boldly copied? The company says that it just wants to make more cars to meet demand. But an American management consultant who asked not to be identified told me that Toyota could have a deeper strategy that actually counts on Chinese manufacturers to usurp and adapt some of the car's technology. The car's central and perhaps most expensive component is its battery. China has already taken a sizable piece of the small-battery business away from leading Japanese manufacturers in recent years, thereby pushing battery prices down by 40 percent or more. The country is also a leading producer of electric motors. China is just the place, in other words, to drive down the price of the Prius's battery and motor, and if that happens it will give Toyota an even bigger jump on the rest of the world's car makers struggling to design and produce their own hybrids. Toyota's move into China could even transform the automotive industry by luring car buyers into hybrids faster. In effect, Toyota may be hoping to ride China's copycat tendencies past American competitors and into the top spot among world car makers -- provided, of course, that Chinese manufacturers do not do to Toyota what they did to Japan's motorcycle makers. It's a dangerous bargain, becoming partner to a system that's a relentless competitor at the same time. The Chinese government recently announced that it would suspend the purchase of large aircraft in 2005, claiming it wants to cool off an overheating domestic aviation industry. It's just as likely that China wants to give its aircraft industry a chance to catch up with foreign manufacturers like Boeing. If so, the American industrial giant, which has pinned much of its future growth on sales in China and has aggressively transferred technology to China in order to secure its place there, may well lose billions in sales -- and end up with a competitor that can match its current technology and beat it on cost. Last month, China announced the first international sale of 20 domestically produced midsize passenger planes. Ted C. Fishman is the author of ''China, Inc.: How the Rise of the Next Superpower Challenges America and the World,'' to be published next month by Scribner and from which this article is adapted. Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/09/magazine...OUNTERFEIT.html
  17. Posted by: Neo Jan 6 2005, 07:56 PM N E W M o d e l – Citizen Campanola Regulator Jan 05, 2005 The Campanola Collection from Citizen now has two new Regulator style models. The Ref. CTR57-0892 features the Citizen quartz caliber 6765 with perpetual calendar and minute repeater. The case, in stainless steel, measures 44mm x 16mm. The tonneau version, Ref. CTR57-0901, equipped with the same caliber, measures 41mm x 18mm. MSRP is $2,800 (294,000 Yen) for either model. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Jan 6 2005, 07:57 PM N E W M o d e l – Oxbow OXH 1021 Jan 05, 2005 Oxbow is a brand of the Groupe Ambre, a French watch manufacturer, based in Morteau. The OXH 1021 comes with a crown protector. The stainless steel case measures 39mm and it is water resistant to 100 meters. Adorned with a black or navy leather strap, it is available with a black, navy or silver dial. The movement is a French quartz ebauche. Courtesy timezone
  18. Posted by: Neo Jan 4 2005, 04:45 PM Homeland Security Warning: Could a Watch become a Weapon? January 4, 2005 Al Qaeda has proven over the years to be a patient and deadly enemy to the United States, and one that adapts to every move to stop them. Now comes word that Al Qaeda is taking a page from one of the most notorious attacks ever against the west to create even more carnage. According to U.S. intelligence sources, Al Qaeda is trying to obtain watches with a hidden butane lighter and watches with an altimeter built in, that together would be used to bring down commercial airliners. Pan Am Flight 103 was brought down over Lockerbie, Scotland with a bomb that used an altimeter device to set it off. Al Qaeda, according to intelligence sources, is adapting that technology and trying to combine it with the butane releasing watches that are designed to be used as cigarette lighters. Altimeter watches show how many feet above sea level a plane is. They are inexpensive, though they are not considered terribly accurate. In Pan Am Flight 103, the bomb was set to go off when the altimeter indicated the plane had reached a certain height. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security bulletin specifically mentions Casio altimeter watches as the most readily available, although there are other brands out there. Watches that can be used as lighters are available on the Internet, and are also inexpensive. This would make two crucial bomb making components easy for Al Qaeda to smuggle onto an airplane. Watches are expected to make metal detectors go off, they are not given much scrutiny at airports. Richard Reid, who once smuggled a bomb onto a plane in his shoes, showed that the rest is frighteningly easy to get on board as well. This information is all still coming into the Eyewitness Newsroom, we'll have more as it becomes available. Source: ABC Eyewitness News
  19. Posted by: Neo Jan 4 2005, 04:25 PM N E W M o d e l – Tissot Bascule Chronograph Jan 03, 2005 The Bascule which debuted at Baselworld 2004 is now available at all Tissot dealers. The case, in stainless steel, measures 41mm X 12mm. The crystal is sapphire. Dial colors are blue, black and white. Movement is the quartz ETA caliber 251.471 with a 51 month battery life. It is water resistant to 30 meters. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Jan 4 2005, 04:26 PM Oris Watch Featured in “After the Sunset” Movie Jan 04, 2005 After the Sunset starring Pierce Brosnan, not only features Panerai watches, but Oris too! The Oris TT1 Chronograph plays an integral part in the new Brett Ratner film, as seen in this underwater sequence. The Oris TTI (Ref. 674-7521-4464RS) features a stainless steel case measuring 42.5mm, a curved sapphire crystal, and a mineral display back. Movement is the automatic ETA caliber 7750. It is water resistant to 100 meters. Courtesy timezone
  20. Posted by: Neo Jan 1 2005, 05:00 PM Judge awards Cartier in copied watch case DECEMBER 21, 2004 - New York -- The federal district court in New York has issued a decision affirming that Cartier has “trade dress” protection against a manufacturer who made expensive copies of four famous Cartier watches. U.S. District Court Judge Constance Baker Motley found watch wholesaler Four Star Jewelry Creations liable for infringing Cartier’s trade dress rights in four Cartier watch designs: the Panthere, the Pasha, the Tank Francaise and the Tank Americaine. The court issued an injunction to prevent Four Star from making the watches in the future, and also awarded Cartier the defendants’ profits, since the watches were so similar to Cartier’s and thus likely to cause consumer confusion. The court determined that the overall appearance of Cartier’s designs were worthy of trade dress protection because the public recognized and associated the designs with Cartier. The judge also ruled that the designs were “non-functional,” meaning the design features were not needed by competitors for function, manufacture or cost. Cartier currently has a number of similar cases pending against dealers in “look-alike” watches in federal courts throughout the country. “This decision is a step in the right direction in protecting the rights of not only Cartier but the whole luxury products industry,” says Stanislas de Quercize, president and chief executive officer of Cartier. “We are extremely gratified by the Court’s strong, clear and carefully reasoned decision, which will help protect our products, our partners, our clients and the Cartier brand.” Courtesy National Jeweler Posted by: Neo Jan 1 2005, 05:01 PM Online jewelry and watch purchases surge DECEMBER 21, 2004 - Reston, Va. -- The jewelry and watch category is the fastest-growing online product category in terms of purchases so far in 2004,according to comScore Network's monthly analysis of consumer online behavior. Annual sales through Dec. 12 totaled $1.35 billion, an increase of 58 percent compared with the same period in 2003, comScore reports in a statement released Monday. Visits to jewelry, luxury goods and accessory sites rose 40 percent from October to November, with 13 million Americans visiting sites in these categories. Department store Web sites also saw an increase in online visitors, gaining 21 percent more visitors from October to November, according to comScore. Overall, 128 million consumers, or 80 percent of the U.S. population that uses the Internet, visited retail Web sites in November. "Consumers will spend more than $15 billion online this holiday season, but the Web's impact on retail extends far beyond its application as a direct selling medium," President and CEO of comScore Media Metrix Peter Daboll said in the statement, adding that many consumers use the Web to research product and compare prices for items they ultimately buy offline. Courtesy National Jeweler Posted by: Neo Jan 1 2005, 05:01 PM Swatch withdraws as Alpine World Cup sponsor DECEMBER 22, 2004 - St. Moritz, Switzerland -- The International Ski Federation (FIS) Alpine World Cup is looking for a new timekeeping sponsor after Swatch's last-minute withdrawal because of a contract violation, reports Dow Jones Newswires. Swatch allegedly resigned from its timekeeping and data processing duties after discovering it didn't have the worldwide exclusivity it had been promised. FIS officials said that Swatch demanded to have worldwide exclusivity to provide timing and data processing for the event in exchange for on-screen television sponsor rights, for which the FIS council voted in favor Nov. 12. Austria, however, apparently violated the agreement after another brand offered them money in exchange for sponsorship rights. Swatch's departure could leave FIS with a $5.3 million bill. Individual events could cost between $139,000 and $174,000. Swatch said it would provide its services for the races where it had pre-existing contracts-Kitzbuehel and Wengen-as well as the world championships in Bormio, Italy, in February. Timing and data at this week's races in St. Moritz-a super-G on Tuesday and a giant slalom on Wednesday-will be provided by Delta Tre, an Italian company. Courtesy National Jeweler Posted by: Neo Jan 2 2005, 08:17 AM Did you know....... The Seiko 35 SQ Astron was the first quartz watch on the market. The first commercially available quartz watch appeared on the market in Tokyo on Christmas Day in 1969. With a limited production run of only 100 pieces, these Seiko watches had analog dials and sold for 450,000 yen ($1250), roughly the same price as a Toyota Corolla. The Astron utilized a hybrid circuit (a combination of circuits on a single substrate which was an intermediate step between discrete circuits and integrated circuits) and a quartz oscillator with a frequency of 8,192 cycles per second. Seiko claimed the new watches were accurate to within about 5 seconds a month, a minute a year. At the time Seiko produced more mechanical watches than any other firm in the world, but company officials had been experimenting with quartz timekeeping since the late 1950s. Their first quartz product was a clock used as a time standard in radio broadcasting. In 1959 a team was assembled to develop a quartz wristwatch. Their first quartz products were battery-powered chronometers, one of which was used in the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 1964. By 1967, Seiko engineers had miniaturized the timekeeper to produce a wristwatch prototype. To develop manufacturing techniques required another two years. Not all time zones are in one hour increments. Some countries use 30 minute offsets. When the time in Greenwich is 12:00 noon, it is 8:30am in Newfoundland and 9:30pm in Australia. In Nepal, however, they use a time offset in quarter hours, so the time there would be 5:45pm. Daylight savings time on Lord Howe Island in Australia is only 30 minutes later than regular time. The wristwatch was invented in 1904 by Louis Cartier. There are 31,557,600 seconds in a year. Horology - The science of time, timekeepers (watches, clocks) and timekeeping. A jiffy is an actual measurement equal to 1/100th of a second. The world's smallest atomic clock has been developed by physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology(NIST). It is small enough to fit on the tip of a pencil, yet is accurate to one second in 300 years.It operates on a AA battery. If it can be mass produced, it will replace the quartz watch, which is much bulkier and less accurate. We may see them one day in any devices that depend on accurate time, such as GPS systems and cell phones. Then you won't have any excuse for being late to work. Prior to 1995, International Date Line split the country of Kiribati. The result was that the eastern part of Kiribati was a whole day and two hours behind the western part of the country where its capital is located. The state of Arizona does not observe DST. However the Navajo Reservation in Arizona does change to Daylight time. The Hopi Reservation is within the Navajo Reservation and does not observe DST (as rest of the state). The second is defined as exactly 9,192,631,770 oscillations or cycles of the cesium atom's resonant frequency, replacing the old second that was defined in terms of the Earth's motions. The newest generation of the "Atomic Clock" is accurate to 30 billionths of a second a year. It is the most accurately measured physical quantity in science. Official U.S. Government time, as provided by NIST and USNO, is available on the Internet at Government Time . NIST also offers an Internet Time Service (ITS) and an AutomatedComputer Time Service (ACTS) that allow setting of computer and other clocks through the Internet or over standard commercial telephone lines. Free software for using these services on several types of popular computers can be downloaded there. Information about these services can be found on the Time and Frequency Division Web site. To find out the time anywhere in the world, go to http://www.timezoneconverter.com. You can create a reference chart that is useful as a reference from your own time zone, to anywhere in the world. Daylight Savings Time:First thought of by Benjamin Franklin in his 1784 essay, "An Economical Project". According to Discover Magazine, scientists have managed to divide time down to attoseconds or 1/1,000,000,000,000,000,000 of a second (18 zeros). If a trip from New York to Los Angeles took one nanosecond (1 billionth of a second), then you would travel about 1/5 of an inch in one attosecond. At that speed, you could travel 112 million times around the earth in one second. Fast enough to get by in New York. Posted by: Neo Jan 4 2005, 04:25 PM deLaCour and Jean-Paul Journe win awards January 03, 2005 Since 1996, World Photo Press has organized a Watch of the Year event in Japan. The 2004 ceremony was held at the end of the year in Tokyo’s Imperial Hotel and honoured the brands F.P. Journe and deLaCour. The very impressive Bichrono by deLaCour was awarded the ‘Unique Design’ award and the ‘Watch of the Year’ winner was François-Paul Journe for his remarkable Tourbillon Souverain. François-Paul Journe (left) and Pierre Koukjian of deLaCour TOURBILLON SOUVERAIN by F.P. Journe and BICHRONO by deLaCour Courtesy europastar
  21. Posted by: Neo Dec 27 2004, 04:41 AM N E W M o d e l – Beuchat X-Life Diver Dec 24, 2004 Beuchat is a French watch company, founded in 1904, and based in Paris. Their latest is the X-Life diver’s watch. The case, in stainless steel, measures 42mm, and the crystal is mineral. The crown and back are screwed-in, ensuring water resistance to 300 meters. The movement is a quartz Swiss ETA caliber 955-122 with a Lithium battery good for 10 years of life. The package comes with 3 extra straps – including a stainless steel bracelet, a rubber band with deployant buckle and an integrated leather strap. MSRP is 250 Euros. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 27 2004, 04:41 AM N E W M o d e l – Asprey No. 8 Rectangular Dec 24, 2004 Asprey, the British luxury purveyor, has added a new case to its collection of mechanical timepieces. Available in stainless steel, 18kt yellow or white gold, the No. 8 Rectangular features a sapphire crystal and a display back. Movement is the automatic ETA caliber 2892-A2. MSRP starts at $3,900. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 27 2004, 04:41 AM N E W M o d e l – Boucheron MEC Chronograph Dec 24, 2004 This limited edition chronograph from LVMH company Boucheron is done in 100 pieces in 18kt rose gold and 150 pieces in stainless steel. The case measures 41mm. The dial is done in Clous de Paris guilloche style. It has double sapphire crystals. Movement is the Zenith caliber El Primero with COSC certification as a chronometer. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 27 2004, 04:44 AM N E W M o d e l – Patek Philippe Twenty-4 Patek Philippe is offering a new version of the Twenty-4 to light up feminine wrists, with a choice of satin bracelets and up-to-the-minute dials. The set cases of these jewel-watches have an elegantly contemporary character. Brand: PATEK PHILIPPE Model: Twenty-4 Movement: Quartz, calibre E15 Function: Hours, minutes Case: 750 (18C) pink or white gold, set with 34 full-size, round, pure Top Wesselton diamonds (0.66 ct) Crown set with a diamond Dial: "Timeless White" or "Eternal Grey" opaline 8 diamond hour markers, appliqué Roman numerals at 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock Baton hands in pink or white gold with a luminescent coating Bracelet / Strap: Satin in vanilla, light or anthracite grey, chocolate brown Courtesy swisstime
  22. Posted by: Neo Dec 24 2004, 11:10 AM BUYING A WATCH INEXPENSIVELY IN GENEVE, SWITZERLAND There are so many competent watchmakers who clean, service and lubricate watches in Geneve that I find the quality of used watches astoundingly high. Speaking French is a big help. If not, you will be restricted to a much smaller group of retailers who can help you. I have only been to Geneve for a total of 18 months in the last 15 years and things do change. The first and absolutely best deals are to be found through a trustees sale. Huge discounts off of the Swiss pricing is only allowed under one condition; the prices are not put in the store windows and these circumstances only last for 30 days total. The good thing is that these trustee/store closure sales usually go on between January 25th and April 25 of each year. It requires registration with the city of Geneve and then for this one 30 day period watches like Rolexes (and I've also seen Vacheron and Maurice Lacroix) can be sold at 40% off the Swiss retail prices. There is a refundable Value added tax which you apply for at the airport when you leave the country or at any of the customs bureaus if you drive out. This 7% tax is usually only available if it reaches some minimum amount like 200 Swiss Francs (US$120., this always seems to change). The Geneve price is often as much as 40% cheaper than the USA retail price and more if the model sells for more than retail. I've seen a typical Patek Philippe Nautilus which sells in the USA for $18,000 going for 12,000 Swiss Francs (approx. US$7,000) in Patek Philippe's own store across the Rue de Rhone from Bucherer (a good place to visit too - see further). A bit of checking with taxi drivers (French is a must) can get you to a trustee sale if one is going on. Bring cash and pick your watch one day, showing a serious interest. Tell the trustee that you will bring the money the next day if the right deal can be struck. Take as much time as possible and notice everything. You may find that one model doesn't have exactly the numerals you want, another has a dial color which isn't exactly right, etc. If you are lucky enough to visit during the last week of the sale you will be astounded by the deals available. These will almost always be new watches with full international warranty. There are almost never deals like this on Patek because they will always take all their watches back for their own inventory. But a trustee that is closing a store will take dealer cost + 10% if possible to pay a store's debts. Also try the stores in Lausanne and Montreux before you go to a more expensive way to purchase your watch. If a closing sale isn't possible then there are other options. Bucherer often has watches that they took deposits on and then the customer returned to their country of origin without taking the watch. I've found good deals on these before. Also there are such things as Omega Chronometer overstock sales which go to dealers like Bucherer. Incredible prices can happen then too. For used watches go to the flea market on Saturday morning (biggest) and Wednesday morning on the Plain Palais. There are many watch factory employees at these flea markets as well as a few dealers who sell used high-grade watches cheap. Dealers from foreign countries often go to these flea markets and buy up everything so there is a price below which deals cannot be made. There are two very interesting dealers in Geneve who can "get" almost anything from other dealers. One is Hartmann's near the Vieux Ville (old city), another is across from the main square where tourist buses park in downtown behind and across from a large sewing machine shop (sorry I go their from memory and don't know the name or address but they are now Zodiac dealers and they have a watch repair shop which is visible through a large window from the street). The last dealer is across the trolley car station about ½ km. to the right of the main doors of the downtown Geneve train station. I know this doesn't sound like a feasible set of directions but by heading for the bridge across the Rhone from the train station you will see this shop off to the right. Dealers who trans-ship need a bit of time. I usually pay about 1/2 the cost of the best deals my Canadian friends can squeeze retailers for in Montreal, Toronto or Vancouver. It used to be well publicized by some Geneve retailers that an American or Canadian could fly to Geneve, buy a 2 tone, stay a week and fly back while saving $500 off the price they would have paid on the watch in North America. Bon Voyage Source: http://www.time4watches.com/WatchKing/buying_in_Geneve.htm
  23. Posted by: Neo Dec 24 2004, 10:49 AM Anatomy of a Watch Strap All the details and options you never knew existed What's the difference between Band, Strap and Bracelet? The terms for the various types of watch bands are frequently confused and misused--often leading to miscommunication, misordering and missatisfaction. To set you on the right path for asking correctly for what you want, here are the definitions of each: Band and Watchband are vague, generic terms used to refer to the band that holds a watch on your wrist. The preferred terms are Bracelet or Strap, which clearly describe the two major types. A Bracelet is a metal link watch band. Similar to a jewelry bracelet, may have a clasp to open it. A Strap is a watch band made of cloth, rubber, leather or other non-metal material. In general, a shiny black strap of a material like crocodile, alligator or lizard is considered the single dressiest strap option for a man. Elegant metal bracelets are usually the second best choice for men, while either a bracelet of strap are usually equally appropriate for ladies dress watches. My watch is on a metal bracelet now, can I change it to a strap? That depends on the specific model you have. The majority of modern and vintage watches have detachable bracelets which can be replaced with a standard watch strap of the correct width. Examples of watches that CAN be easily switched to a strap.Simple bracelet. Custom fit bracelet, but on standard lug connections. Non-standard, brand or model-specific strap/bracelet connection. Requires the manufacturer to provide a custom strap that fits this case. If not, some specialty strap makers may be able to create a custom strap for the watch. Fixed pin or peg connection. These connections can be accomodated--but require 'open-ended' straps. Once attached, this type of strap is not easily removed without damaging the strap. Such straps are commonly made and only require you to purchase the correct width. Though they may not be an in-stock item in average watch retailers. Integrated bracelet--the bracelet and the watch case are either a single piece or an integrated design that does not include a standard strap connection. Sometimes a matching model with an adapted case design was offered for those who wanted a version of the same watch, but on a strap. Loop end watch cases are common with the extremely dainty style of some vintage ladies watches. These were designed to connect to loop bracelets. There are alternative bracelets to fit such watches, but not leather straps. In most cases, no. If your watch can take a standard strap, then you can buy a strap of any decent brand. As long as it is of the correct width and sufficiently sturdy, you should be fine. Only a limited number of uniquely styled watches require specialized, non-standard straps only available from the manufacturer of that specific watch. But there are two particular advantage of buying a strap of the same brand. One is that the buckle on the strap will likely have the logo of the watch company on it. The other is that is keeps your watch more authentic, having the strap of the same brand. Both of these advantages are nice small touches that some people enjoy, while others see no need to go to additional effort or expense for them. Buying straps from the watch manufacturer can be difficult. Only a few of the fine watchmakers encourage their authorized dealers to stock a range of the manufacturer's straps in their stores. Other watchmakers require you to order them--often sight unseen--from a customer service center, or through an authorized dealer that may not even have samples or catalog photos to show you. What kinds of straps are available? Straps can be made of any of a variety of materials. The most common are: Leather, other animal hides and simulated hides Cloth, fabric, and nylon Rubber or plastic And they come in many different configurations: Hide-faced, padded. A favorite for larger men's watches. Hide-faced, flat. Typically used on slim dress watches. Flat fabric. A simple but practical style. Favored by the military. Moulded. Shaped straps of rubber or plastic. Tang-type buckle: By far the most common. Operates just like most men's belts, except does not have to be 'let out' near as often. Deployant clasp, inside style: On this style, the 'tail' of the watch strap goes on the inside of the clasp. While this style has a more elegant look, it does not always work with just any standard strap. Often, a custom strap is needed to prevent the tang-slot and keeper loop features of the strap from showing. Deployant clasp, outside style: With this second type, the tail of the strap goes on the outside--the same way it does with a standard tang-type buckle. This is the more common type and several versions are available that can fit on to most existing leather watch straps. What do I need to know to buy a strap? If your watch does take a standard strap, then all you really need to know is the width between the 'lugs' of the watch where the strap attaches. The Clasp or Buckle: [*]Standard tang-buckle strap: much like a traditional belt. [*]Deployant Clasp: a folding, locking metal clasp that operates similarly to the clasps on metal watch bracelets. The Buckle-End of the Strap: [*]Standard tang-buckle strap. Much like a traditional belt. [*]Deployant-specific. Special straps designed for particular types of deployant clasps. These are noticably longer on one side and lack the 'keeper' loop and the hole for the 'tongue' of a tang-type buckle. Note that not all deployant clasps require special straps--many are made to work with standard tang-buckle type straps. The width of the strap at the buckle end is seldom of concern to the strap buyer unless you are looking to use a different clasp than the one that comes with the strap. Most straps taper so that they are somewhat narrower at the buckle-end. Mens watch straps of 20 or 18mm at the watch-end are commonly 16mm at the buckle end. Some 20mm straps and most 22mm straps are 18mm at the buckle end. Ladies straps tend to taper 4-6mm less than the watch-end. The Watch-End of the Strap: Standard: Contour fit end straps offer greater elegance. Their contoured ends that fit flush against the contours of the watch case. Because the exact distance from the spring pins to the watch case and the specific curve of the case vary across watch designs, such straps are often fairly unique to a specific watch model. Non-Standard: [*]Have an integrated bracelet and lack the connections for a conventional strap. Note that some watches that look like the bracelet is integrated actually can have it removed and a standard strap attached. [*]Use a specially designed strap that is unique to the brand or model. While these look very elegant and stylish, they have the extreme disadvantage of forcing you to buy all your replacement straps at premium prices from the watch manufacturer. [*]Vintage watches that do not use standard removable spring pins. Width at the end that attaches to the watch is typically 18mm for standard men's dress watches. Mens sports-style watches may be 20mm or in a few rarer cases 22mm. Ladies watches typically range from 9mm to 14mm. Even sizes are most common, but you may encounter odd sizes on ladies or vintage mens watches. The Watch: [*]The parts of the watch that stick out to hold the detachable strap or bracelet are called the 'lugs.' [*]The watch itself may add around 1.5 inches (4 mm) to the circumference when attached to the strap. So when measuring for a strap, always add the length of your watch (measured from the top spring pin to the bottom one) when comparing the strap size to the circumference of your wrist. The Length of the Strap: [*]Length often listed merely as Regular, Short or Long. A mens Regular length strap usually accomodates wearers with 6.5 to 8" wrists. [*]Don't forget to add the size of the watch to the size of the strap when comparing to the circumference of your wrist. Courtesy of Chronocentric
  24. Posted by: Neo Dec 23 2004, 12:17 PM N E W M o d e l – Baume & Mercier Classima Executive GMT Dec 21, 2004 The Ref. 8462 is the latest from Richemont Group company Baume & Mercier. The stainless steel case measures 42mm, the crystal is sapphire and it is water resistant to 30 meters. Movement is the automatic ETA caliber 2893-2 with GMT function. MSRP is $1,595. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 23 2004, 12:17 PM N E W M o d e l – Ernst Benz GMT Dec 21, 2004 The latest from Ernst Benz is this model with Dual Time Zones. The case, in stainless steel, measures 40mm. The crystal and the exhibition back are sapphire and the dial can be had in white or black. It is water resistant to 50 meters. Movement is the automatic ETA caliber 2893-2, with Incabloc shock protection, a Glucydur balance and a Nivarox alloy hairspring. It is available with a black leather strap or a stainless steel bracelet. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 23 2004, 12:17 PM N E W M o d e l – Eberhard Extra-Fort Grand Date Chronograph Dec 21, 2004 The lates from Eberhard is this big-date chronograph that measures 41mm. It is water resistant to 50 meters. Movement is the Eberhard caliber EJ-8150 (base ETA 7750) with big-date complication and a tri-compax arrangement. The dial has a tachymetric scale and the crystal and display back are sapphire. It is available in black or white dials with a leather strap or a stainless steel bracelet. MSRP starts at 4,350 Euros. It is available in 18kt rose gold for 8,500 Euros. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 23 2004, 12:19 PM N E W M o d e l – Tissot Prince Double Timezone Dec 22, 2004 Available in stainless steel or in stainless steel and gold plate (10 micron), the Prince Double Timezone features two separate ETA caliber 901.001 quartz modules. Diameter is 49mm X 27mm X 8mm. The crystal is mineral, and the dial is ivory. It is water resistant to 30 meters. Courtesy timezone Posted by: Neo Dec 23 2004, 12:20 PM N E W M o d e l – Chopard Happy Sport Chinese Zodiac Dec 22, 2004 Featuring dancing monkeys and dragons, signs of the Chinese Zodiac, these new models of the Happy Sport collection will be certain to please. Dials are lacquered and feature “floating” diamonds. Movements are Swiss ETA quartz. The crystal is sapphire. Courtesy timezone
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