The Watch Enthusiast September 2004
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1. Welcome to the First Anniversary issue of The Watch Enthusiast. The Watch Enthusiast is a free monthly newsletter about watch collecting. Our goal is to provide:
Original articles about the enjoyment of collecting and wearing wrist and pocket watches.
Up to date information based on reliable sources.
As an anniversary issue, I though I’d look to the use of watches for branding and the celebration of an anniversary, such as the retirement watch. I’ll also go into exactly what is a split-second chronograph really. Please let me know if there is a particular watch or style of watch that you would like to see discussed in future articles.
2. Split-Second Chronographs
I’ve seen some intriguing split-second chronographs online, including online auctions. I say intriguing because many of them were not true split-second chronographs. I know that when I first started collecting, I thought a split-second chronograph was a watch with a chronograph (stop watch) feature that had each second, on the outer ring of the dial, divided into fifths. I soon learned that was just plain wrong. A split-second chronograph is a chronograph with two timing hands, one on top of the other. Such a watch is excellent for timing the splits in a race and it would not surprise me if the term split-second did not come from dividing time, but rather from measuring different splits of a horse race.
A basic split-second chronograph, ...more detail...
will be without any minute or hour registers. Split-second pieces, like regular chronographs, may also have additional registers to record minutes and hours. Both hands will generally be started by depressing the crown (or chrono button on wrist watches). There will be a separate button to stop the split. When the split button is depressed again, the split hand will rejoin the regular timing hand. The main button will stop both hands and reset them both to 12.
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With such a dial and an inscription including presented by the Packard Motor Car Company, this is a great automotive collectible. Additionally, for the automotive collector, while not directly related, the top grade pocket watch made by the South Bend Watch Company was called The Studebaker. Yes, the family that owned that car company also owned South Bend and stayed true to form in naming things after themselves.
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Sometimes retirement watches are collected because of their association with certain vocations such police, fire or railroaders. For me, the most interesting part of retirement watches are the stories, and questions, that arise with certain inscriptions. For example, I wonder why an individual receives a watch in 1951 from co-workers, and not the company, commemorating his more than 48 years of service in the passenger department of the Burlington Railroad.
If I had to guess, it is not something that would be politically correct now – while really not a politically correct person, I would say that after 48 years, the man deserved a gold watch from the company and not be relegated to receiving a gold-filled piece from his co-workers.
5. Musings... The summer was busier than usual with life issues, so hopefully I can start off the Fall in proper style with a timely September newsletter and continue on from here. With auctions starting up again this month and major watch shows, I’ll provide a market update in the October issue. While I believe in timeliness, I also believe that summer is a time to relax (which I wish I had gotten to) in order to face the stress of the Fall. If all goes well, there will actually be 12 monthly issues during this second year of the Watch Enthusiast newsletter. Please provide your comments about this newsletter and let me know if there is any watch collecting area you would like to see explored in this newsletter.
6. Helpful Resources Don’t want to spend the money for the big chronograph book? You can find a lot of information about chronographs at http://www.chronomaster.co.uk/index.htm This site also has a helpful section regarding “which watch to buy” and quite an interesting section of quotes about time. Current production by the top watchmaker in the world, Patek Philippe, as well as information from their museum can be accessed at http://www.patekphilippe.com
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To subscribe to other TIAS newsletters, including The Watch Enthusiast for which I am the editor and primary contributor: http://tias.com/subscribe
Thank you for reading!
If you have questions about watches or watch collecting, please forward to huck@tias.com. We will not respond to questions solely about value of a particular watch. For an estimate, discuss with watch friends, check with a local appraiser or auction houses or, on the web, try http://www.kovel.com for a price book or http://www.whatsitworthtoyou.com/tias.htm for an online appraisal.
Please e-mail Huck@Tias.com with any comments or if you would like to write a short note for this newsletter. Also, please let me know if there are any items that you would like me to search for free to forward this to a friend. To subscribe to this or other TIAS newsletters, especially The Cuff Linker for which I'm also the editor and primary author, go to http://www.tias.com/subscribe
Please let me know your thoughts on how my store or our mall can be adjusted to make finding the type of cuff links that you are searching for easier and your overall browsing experience more pleasurable!
I'm still hopeful that some of you will write in with your own collectors' creeds. If you have particular rules that you have followed to a fun collection, please write in so they can be passed on to everyone. Thank you for reading! Please feel free to forward this to a friend. Paul G. Huck email: Huck@Tias.com website: http://captainhucksbooty.com