Do Habring count?
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As well as Bulova’s Precisionist and Seiko’s Spring Drive, who else makes a ‘non traditional’ sweeping second hand?
Do Habring count?
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Smiths 'Seafire':
https://www.timefactors.com/smithsprs37.htm
Last edited by Dapper; 24th July 2019 at 19:03.
Do they do one other than a usual smooth ticker?
They have the dead seconds (the definition of a not sweeping seconds!) and the foudroyante sub-dials, but that's not the same complication as a sweeping seconds.
I ask as I'm extremely keen on their wares and the complications they do at a very impressive (low) price.
Omega f300 and other electronic watches.
The precisionist movement is still driven the same way just more frequently.. i think from memory it is a 16 steps per second movement so appears continuous unless slow motion is used
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The Electric watches had a slightly odd tick.
LIP R148
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fIs0r8iJKg
Mechanicals that tick full seconds are unusual and expensive.
Jaeger-LeCoultre Geophysic True Second
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1KI4LZAkBfc
Didn't some Sinn models have a funny 'bounce' in the second hand due to the use of oil filled cases? Something to do with the resistance as it moved if I remember correctly.
Last edited by Nuisance Value; 25th July 2019 at 20:09.
There were reports of the UX having a strange bounce but as you say it was more to do with the medium the hand is moving through than the movement. The hand ticks and then moves back slightly in rebound.
I have JSAR that has the worst bounce I have ever seen, the second hand is so long that the tip flicks back and forth every tick. It actually makes the watch interesting to watch. Thankfully the hand hits all the markers.
stop2go
Definitely non traditional
Thanks, I’ve just googled the Maratac Pilot. Unfortunately it doesn’t seem available anymore.
Surely there must be other watches to use this movement? It’s can’t have been developed for the Smiths Seafire alone, can it?
If I am not wrong, I think the Maratac came first.
Take that!
Apparently the Casio MTP-SW320D-1AV has a smooth running seconds.
https://www.casio-intl.com/asia/en/w...TP-SW320D-1AV/
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=og1GRKZX_N0&t=46s
I’ve found a couple more. Both are quartz watches with a sweeping second hand, possibly using the same movement as the Smiths Seafire.
MWC GGW-113US quartz field watch with 36mm diameter (excl. crown) and sweeping second hand.
Merci Instruments LMM-01 Project Special Field Watch with 38mm diameter and sweeping second hand.
There’s a Hodinkee article about the Merci field watch. Though I prefer the slightly larger size of the Smiths Seafire, as well as the Seafire’s design.
Beta 21 quartz watches have a non ticking seconds hand as well.
A very non-traditional seconds 'hand', and pretty unusual watch in general.
https://youtu.be/W6-NKRjYE6Y
The Seiko 5s21 had a quartz sweep hand . A short clip of the Seiko 5s21-7a10 below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCcsFitY-KE
Last edited by Tazmo61; 3rd September 2019 at 20:53.
https://www.watchfinder.co.uk/articl...x-seconds-myst
has to be the most non traditional?
That is really cool, very nearly justifying the total distraction from actually reading the time on a timepiece.