There's the Eberhard & Co Mareoscope. Not very common but I do remember one being for sale here a while back.
I'm assuming tide times was a complication that featured a lot in the 70s, but my hunt for a non digital tide watch is coming up short. there's a Timex and a Nixon, but otherwise it's all Casio digis and RipCurls and things. Would love to find something without a batter that did the job, old or new, if anyone has any pointers or suggestions please?
There's the Eberhard & Co Mareoscope. Not very common but I do remember one being for sale here a while back.
Some years ago there was a Sinn 142 Tides
with the Lemania 5100:
Then the 142 St II GZ Chromo with a tide bezel.
Now there's the Sinn 240-ST-GZ https://www.ablogtowatch.com/sinn-240-st-gz-watch/
I've been hankering after one myself and have been keeping my eyes open. Mr Curta has the only Mareoscope on the forum that I am aware of. They don't come up very often but two have come up on Catawiki in recent months. The last one went for about £1,500 IIRC. There is currently one on Catawiki at the moment, the auction ends in six days. The watch fund is empty so I won't be going for it.
Those Sinns look really good too.
The problem with mechanical tide watches is that they are only going to be accurate for one tide after being manually set to the previous high tide, whereas digital tide watches can be programmed to offer much more accuracy for subsequent tides.
AFAIK there's never been a mechanical movement that can produce the (average) semi-diurnal tide difference of +12 hrs 25 minutes - but happy to be enlightened to the contrary.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
https://patents.google.com/patent/US5327400
Abstract
The present invention has for its object a watch movement more particularly a wrist watch, a chronograph watch or a pocket watch which comprises a time display formed by a dial and hands and which comprises a tide indicator constituted by a tides disk 16 which is to be seen through a window of the dial 5 and which makes one turn in twenty-four hours. This disk is driven in rotation through the hand display. A moon phases hand 15 is also driven by the hand display, at the speed of one turn in 29.5 days and cooperates simultaneously with the tides disk 16 and with the signs 20 to 23 representing the phases of the moon disposed on the dial 5 around the tides disk 16.
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
Been out in the rain on the water all day, so this is a marvelous set of replies to come back to. This place is such a gold mine of knowledge, thank you chaps. Going to hit the research over a beer before the match!
Patent from Walter Hanes (of Abercrombie and Fitch) from way back in the late forties - mid fifties. This is for the seafarer watches. If budget allows these are the origin of the species.
Last edited by HookedSeven; 11th July 2021 at 17:00.
Turns out there's a few more too, although in most cases deep pockets required... https://www.ablogtowatch.com/tag/tide-chart/