Bulova 10ct. Rosé Gold Tonneau
Bulova 10ct. Rosé Gold Tonneau
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A 14ct. rosegold Tonneau from Bulova
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This watch was made in the 1960s
Model: Rosé Gold Tonneau
Year: 1941
Scope of Delivery: zrhbrg Packaging with digital Asset
Glass: Acrylic Glass
Case Material: 14ct. Rosé Gold Rolled
Bezel Material: 14ct. Rosé Gold Rolled
Case Back Material: Stainless Steel
Features: Small-Second
Indexes: Print
Dial Handstyle: Syringe Hands
Caliber: Bulova 10AX
Power Reserve: 38h
Number of Stones: 17
Frequency: 18.000A/h
Clasp Type: Pin Buckle
Clasp Material: Stainless Steel
About the Brand
Bulova is famous for a number of horological innovations, perhaps most notably the Accutron watch which used resonating tuning forks as a means of regulating the time keeping function. The “Accutron” tuning fork watches use a 360 hertz tuning fork to drive a mechanical gear train. The inventor, Max Hetzel, was born in Basel, Switzerland, and joined the Bulova Watch Company of Bienne, Switzerland, in 1948. This outstanding engineer was the first one to use an electronic device, a transistor, in a wrist watch. Thus, Max Hetzel developed the first watch in the world that truly deserved the qualification “electronic”- the world-famous “Bulova Accutron.” They also were subjects of the other famous space era rivalry with Omega Watches for being the first watch on the moon. Ultimately, the Omega Speedmaster Professional chronograph wristwatch (known as the “Moon watch”) was designated by NASA for use by the astronauts in all manned space missions, becoming the first watch on the moon on the wrist of Edwin ‘Buzz’ Aldrin. However, all instrument panel clocks and time-keeping mechanisms in the spacecraft on those missions were Bulova Accutrons with tuning fork movements.