Monday, December 26, 2005

Happy New Year 2006

Should Peace prevails on Earth and could this year affort joy and happyness to everybody!

What's a year? Did you notice that the more you are aged the less it is? Amazing...Though the amount of necessary frustrations, 2005 was a "very good year" (the Franck Sinatra song). The time for professionnal achievements, the pleasure to see younger collaborators succeeding in their tasks and their family life, the pleasure to see the decisions taken the year before, being fruitful, even more than expected sometime.

There is still a lot to do, at lot of projects, a lot a new hopes in which we believe, we should believe, again and again, as long as life will go on...

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More funny, in 2005, I discovered as a new hobby, the fascination a some wonderful and popular watches. I don't know what I like the most at the moment, photography or these amazing micro-machines. Likely because I like them both equaly, I did not realize until now how many pictures I accumulated in my computer the past year... About 400 (oops!!) were mostly posted on watchuseek fora and galeries, or this blog. New friends there, seemed to enjoy them. So it's a pleasure to publish them at once on 82 pages here.

Cheers,


Marc

Marc

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Season Greeting from France

Fall in Western Europe

Fall is a special festive season in many places in world at that time. Still mild (17°C - 61°F ), the tree leaves render splendid tones that are only there for a short time before the dark winter days. This late explosion of colors, is always for me a period of calm and plenitude with something deaply optimistic. In Japan the local mapple trees are something so magnificent to see. I will never forget the several visits I paid to Kyoto, Tokyo and many other fascinating places of the Japanese archipelago.

I have a lot to report from these Japaneses expericiences on this blog or elsewhere, but today I just want to send my seasonal greetings to all.

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Sunday, October 09, 2005

A vintage "cosmos" watch

The Russian cosmos missions

USSR developped its early astronautical projects with a very "controlled" public information, even for the civilian missions, unlike NASA who did them using the full media support. The advertising was however massive with successfull and popular missions capable to carry a very good image. Who forgot Yuri Gagarin, likely as famous as President Kennedy or USSR Premier Kroutchev. Gagarin stays in the 20th centry world popular memory, at a scale probably not gained by many other one? Just "google" his name to see...

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"I see Earth. It's so beautifull" would have say Gagarin, first words from space of the first man who left Earth to the open cosmos on April 12, 1961. In the spaceship Vostok 1, Senior Lieutenant Yuri Alexeyevich Gagarin orbited earth one time at an altitude of 162,5 nautical miles (302 kilometers) for 108 minutes at 18,000 miles an hour. He was the first man to see that the earth was indeed round, indeed mostly water, and indeed magnificent.


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Earth during the Apollo 17 mission (December 07-19, 1972, Apollo 17 CSM America and LM Challenger, Eugene A. Cernan "The Last Man on the Moon", Ronald E. Evans, Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt)

Yes, so beautiful is the word. This sunlight diffusion phenomenon which gives the blue color of our living atmospher, the white clouds, something beautiful by instinct, a blue planet, "home, home" said E.T.

The culture of the secret in former USSR, the further way of History, does not render the merited reflect of the Russian space technology, that recently and strangely became the most reliable one for spaceships connexion to ISS.

The russian cosmos watches

Unlike NASA, many different types of watches were flown in the Russian missions (see for instance this link where cosmonauts sell their personnal objects).
Even a French chrono YEMA did EVA's from the MIR space station ...:







(from this link)

Historicaly, in the 60's, the military flight pilot and cosmonauts used Russian watches manufactured in the
OJSC "First Moscow Watch Factory", the factory's most known trademark "ПОЛЕТ" (POLJOT). Yuri Gagarin wore a "ШТУРМАНСКИЕ" (Sturmanskie, based on an French watch caliber, the Lip R26 see the very nice article by Strela, member of Watchuseek internet fora) during his initial flight to cosmos. This watch was not really a chronograph. Another wrist-watch chronograph used in the Russian Air Force was the Стрела (Strela) chrono, with a column-wheel caliber 3017 - 19 jewels, analogous to the Swiss Venus 150 movment. Such Strela is tought beeing on the wrist of Alexi Leonov during another historical event: the first "EVA" (Extra vehicular activity) in the open cosmos on March 18, 1965.


A 1.8 MB mpeg video of the historical Leonov EVA is available here , unfortunately it is impossible to see anything of his watch... .


Acquisition of the vintage Strela 3017

To complete my Russian watch family, I had in mind to acquire an exemplary of such vintage model. Brand-new and re-issued version of the Strela is also available from Poljot. These new models are also very nice. They are mounted with the Poljot 3133-23 jewels caliber used for the OKEAH chrono (see my post of August, 2005), that was the next generation of military chronos appeared in 1976.

Strela watches are not very common nowadays. They were produced between 1959 and 1979 with several hands and dial designs: white or black dial with or without tachymetre/telemeter scales, luminous-chromed or golden hands, under several brand name : Strela, Sekonda, Exacta Poljot, in Englisk or in Russian.Their case was very thin and made of 3 parts : the case chrome-plated, the case back in stainless steel and the crystal clipsed with a bezel. Strelas are neither shock nor water protected.

I've waiting for about one month before focusing on an eBay auction from German seller, on which I believed the watch affordable and the seller reliable. Unfortunately the history of Strela watch are more and more popular and I had to pay abit to much than I expected..Anyway the watch arrived safely a couple of day after.

The watch is a "Sekonda 19 Jewels" with the black dial. The caliber 3017 has the serial # 10900. The main chrono hand (chromed) with the red spot, and the other hands golden that looked quite new. The watch was monted on new black leather band that I substitute for a military black Nato strap 18 mm to fit the lug dimension.


Photographies use a Kane MK-6B dead reckoning navigation computer made of anodized aluminium (copyrighted by Kane Aero Co., St Paul, Minnesota, 1957).






This picture uses a leaflet map of Evansville airport, Indiana, (copyrighted by Airguide Publications Inc., Long Beach, California, 1986. Flight Guide, Airport Frequency Manual, Vol. II, Central & Eastern U.S.)

I also tried a "galuchat" (stingray skin) band which is thin enouch to match the case design:


The dial is not also in very good shape. There is a misscentering and it looks that the second and the minute register hands rubbed the dial (however the watch fully works correctly!)... The lume marks were green but are now more grey than green...Two strange holes were done at 12 and 6 then masked by a point of black painting...white marks are missing or partially missing at 1,2 and 4...



I find the texture of this stingray (the poor!) skin very strange :







The chromed brass of the case is not corroded. There are a lot of small scratches...the closer you look, the worse it is. Tough life of this watch!



The crown is original and the pusher are very characteristic of the 1950-1960 Swiss chromnographs.

Discussing on the watchuseek Russian watch forum, I learned not surprizingly that the hands, excepted the chrono long one, are not the original hands corresponding correctly to this series. I was happy anyway thinking that this sort of situation is part of long life of this watch.

Restauration of correct hands

This is themiracle of internet and internet fora. Spontaneously, I discover in my personnal message on the watchuseek forum a message of Frank (thanks Frank) , another member from Germany offering a set of correct hands for my watch, just for sympathy.

The chromed hands are of a very special design :



They are very fragile, but they arrived safely through the post office.

OK. I don't have - unfortunately - the skill and the knowledge to do the hand replacement by myself. I asked the jewelery where I bought my Omega Speedmaster Professional (see this link) where they have a complete workshop with experienced watchmaker. I don't know if they are trained for many conflicting customers, but the responsible guy refused flat, arguing that it was too risky for them and for the watch! I left the shop with a mixed feeling. These guys clearly don't want to get some troubles. Is this addrees really good for my Omega too? ("A l'Heure Franco Suisse", rue Ferrandière, Lyon, 69002, France). We will see that later.

Let's try my neighbor watchmaker (rue Belford, at la Croix-Rousse). His shop is so nice. He does not have many new watches and he essentially repairs mechanical clocks, and wristwatches. He has everything necessary, an amazing workbench, pressure test machine, frequency meter...He was very amused and did the work safely for almost nothing!





The "bijouterie" (jewelery in French) of the Belford street at "la Croix Rousse" Lyon, France, who did the hand change of the Strela.

The only problem afterward (that I just solved by myself) was the small hand of the second register that slightly touched underneath the hour hand at about 8 o'clock (when it was tangent to the minute register). The watch then stopped ( ) . I opened very carefully the bezel with a knife (my God this was the first I did that! Be carefull not to scratch the whole mechanism upon opening!!) and adjusted a bit the hours hand with a piece of tooth pick. I checked then if the large minute hand passed over the hour one with no problems and it was OK. My first "repair"...

My Strela is flown to space again! (would better say to kosmos)







A further small restauration


Following another advice, the idea is to correct the nude brass visible on the dial at the periphery of the smal registers holes. These hole are larger than they should be indicating that this dial may have mounted to another watch, may be with a "alien" movment (a "Franken" watch in other words!). In a reduced models shop, I found some satin black painting. I re-opened the crystal bezel and with the smallest and the most thin brush I could find in the shop, I carefully deposited a bit of painting...I tested the painting before on different matters to train myself. The paint is very tainted and one coat is enough...



I did not succeed near the temeleter scale because the space available is really to small. I was afraid to touch the scale with the brush ( ). Better is to leave it like this, than to damage the dial! It would require to deposit the hands again, but no way for now!! I prefer to enjoy the fantastic Strela at the moment. It just returned today to its Nato strap.







Other combos

I tried also another sort of military band with a leather pad to protect the skin from the watch.







(The watch lies on a sectional aeronautical chart, Montreal, published at Washington D.C., US Department of Commerce, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Admisnistration, 1991, and a Swiss Victorinox knife type Minichamp II).

It is of course possible to have a mixed combo: the galuchat skin plus the pad.



The watch here on another military Nato strap (so-called "James Bond" type...)





(The background illustration comes from a book entitled ”Five evenings with programmable calculator”. Printed in Moscow,1988, 109 pages).

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Further possible restauration expected


I saw on ebay some kit for preparing new green lume and some new advice to deposit it on the dial. I may try to restore the green lume at 9 and 3 and may the spots at the hours positions.


The pictures presented here are also on my WUS posts .


__________________







Monday, August 22, 2005

Dr. Strangelove

The incredible thing of our time is the possibility to watch any of your preferred movies on your PC, at your leasure, from a DVD or any suitable compressed digitalized files! I have about 30 a these magical disks covering classical cinema of my preference.

On a Linux box, you may need a special "libdvdcss" library, usually not installed by default, to decode what you normaly and honestly paid for watching your movies.

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My Linux box Shinkaze, a pure Microsoft-free PC (see my initial post on this blog)

My interest in computer history, watches, and navigational devices maybe gave me a specific reason to be specialy interested in the unforgetable Stanley Kubrick's Chef d'Oeuvre Dr. Strangelove or : How I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb, and the astonishing Peter Sellers in his triple roles of the President Muffley, President of the United States of America, the smart British officer Group Captain Mandrake, and the mysterious nuclear expert Dr. Strangelove.

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President Muffley trying to explain to the Soviet Premier "Dimitri" how a certain General Ripper "became a little funny in his head" and decided to launch a sneak nuclear attack on USSR!

In 1964, everything is already on the scene : as the concept of interconnected computers (the "Doom machine"...), the economy race in which USSR has some trouble to follow. The dialogs are a pure piece of art and perfection all along the film.

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The enigmatic nuclear expert Dr. Strangelove explaining the principle a the "Doom machine"

Should we really stop worrying, even now?


Saturday, August 20, 2005

Watch "experiments", August 2005

Fascinating wrist watch "computers"

A watch is indeed a fascinating computer. By definition, a watch accumulates, in different registries, its time-based units : as seconds, minutes, hours, days, years...It could be done electronically quite precisely, but how we could not be fascinated by the way of how a mechanical watch, especialy a wrist chronograph is doing this?

Associated to the human individuals, it follows their life, works, travels, sports.It is really amazing to see this apparently delicate machineries operating for years in very difficults condition (temperature, shocks, vibration, humidity) for the most rugged one. Their precisions is sometime approaching the electronical watches, but it is so pleasent to see them functioning without a single electronic component and a tighten spring as sole energy source!

During this August month, I did new horological "experiences" with some of my watches, especially with my preferred Russian ones. Theses "experiences" are not at all technical nor scientific. It was just consisting to try different watch combos with bracelets or bands (nothing really mechanically adventurous!) but it maked also very good occasions to photograph them.

Extension of my Russian watches collection

What's more, I received two new beautiful Russian exemplaries : A Vostock "Blue Diver" and the famous Poljot chronograph Komansdirskie OKEAH (Ocean). This later is a re-issued version of the military chronograph released by Poljot as the new precision standard in 1976. This chrono is based on the same Poljot 3133 movement as initially. This watch (I mean this series) went to space as nicely described here by Strela a member of the Watchuseek forum.

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My Russian watch team in August,2005

A watch combo and set

The sensation to wear a wrist watch is very depending of the complete set : the complete watch case and the bracelet, or the band, associated to it. With a bicycle, one says that you could change many things : the saddle, the handle bar, the brakes, the pedals, even the wheels, you would keep the same bicycle, but if you change the frame, you get a new bicycle!

It is likely the same with a wrist watch. The "frame" role is played by the watch case plus the dial. The rest could be changed without the feeling to change of watch. The other important element, in straight contact with the skin, is the bracelet, the band, the strap.

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The Poljot Sturmanskie set: the original stainless steel bracelet, a blue skark skin band, and a 70's style "rally" black leather band

Steel bracelets or leather bands?

Functionnaly, there are no really choices. A good quality stainless-steel bracelet is almost mandatory if the watch have to be worn in a hot and humid climate and/or if you have physical acivities. The swear and the humidity would ruin in a few weeks the most of leather bands. A nylon and tissue strap can be washed and may be a bit more durable but not easy to keep clean, for sure. A stainless steel bracelet, is however necessarily more heavy and massive, in particular those of the high-end quality with their links machined in single pieces of steel.


The ensemble steel bracelet + the chrono case weights a lot on the arm. It is recommended to leave the space of a finger (the small one is enought) and not to adjust the bracelet too tight to compensate the wrist size change during the day. This makes the watch a bit floppy on the wrist but once trained, it is like a familiar presence.

One can wear a leather band in the same way. It is always more comfortable as long as the leather is not humid. The watch is not floppy even with the band not tightened. As far as I am concerned a steel bracelet is necessary during summertime and I am pleased to have alternative bands for the rest of the time.

The "experiences"

Vostock Blue Diver

Let's see now these beauties, first the Vostosk Blue Diver mounted on a "mesh" baracelet (the original one is a blach 18mm leather band) :



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The OKEAH (OCEAN) Chronograph

The OKEAH chrono is a very special "pillow shaped" watch design, typical of the 70's. Pictures and discussion on Watchuseek forum, give some example of what kind of bands/bracelet can be used to match this design. I tried the mesh bracelet but it looked a bt too narrow (18 mm for the band) and thin for this watch.

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A stainless steel bracelet mounted on the OKEAH chrono.

The original black leather band I got with the watch, is signed Poljot both on the band and the buckle.

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I tried
first a "Royal" blue shark skin band fitted with a butterfly deployant :

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It inspired a "marine" series of pictures :

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And another series with the help of a navigation rule (a French type called "Amiral Jean Cras")

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The rule is officialy agreed by the French Air Ministry, not the watch...

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Then, it tested a less flashy shark skin given as "blue" but likely grey-blue. The band is a bit more thcker padded than the previous one:

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The "Breitling" Pilot-style bracelet is a chinese fabrication (have a look to an original one....it costs about 950 US $) :

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Note the special lug design.

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"Komandirskie * VMF *" (Vojenno Morskoj Flot)

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Poljot watches, fully constructed in Moscow factory will be no longer issued under this brand name. Volmax brand is now issuing Aviator, Sturmanskie and Buran series on a new assembly managment...at more expensive rates.

As final choices the original band, the grey shark skin, and the Breitling Pilot-style bracelet are now parts of the OKEAH set :

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The Sturmanskie "Sinn 6000 replica"

The final experience concerned the Poljot "Sinn 6000" replica (as not really masked by Poljot itself). The original steel bracelet is polished as the watch case. Some other version of this watch were also mat satin.
A previous post on this blog gives already a complete set of this original combo. I tried the royal-blue shark skin first on this watch :

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The second experience was with a "rally"-style black leather band that recalls the 60-70's :

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The corresponding posts on Watchuseek fora can be found here.

Most of the pictures published here can be found at higher resolution from my preferred pictures galleries at topcities.com.

Russian watch fascination

The Poljot factory officially closed in Moscow at the end of the past year (see this WUS recent discussion). The new factory Maktime is producing
now more high-end models as the Aviator/Sturmanskie/Buran series. The Russian production of mechanical watches still remains fascinating by its diversity, its traditional and historical links to the associated human enterprises. To have the best idea of this industry, one can recommend the Michele Cuoccio's web site and his impressive collection of Russian watches.