Important Watches, Pocket Watches and...

Noga Hilton Hotel, Nov 13, 2005

LOT 66

?30-Day Going? Breguet & Comp.ie, No. 10156, the ebauche by Aimé Jacob. Made circa 1860. Very fine and rare, ebonized, 30-day going center-seconds floor-standing seconds-beating regulator.

CHF 80,000 - 120,000

EUR 50,000 - 80,000 / USD 60,000 - 90,000

Sold: CHF 72,450

C. Ebonised, rectangular cresting above molded cornice, the trunk with glazed paneled doors and locks for the dial and pendulum bob, glazed panel between, molding down to the plinth and mounted over molded base. D. Circular, white enamel, inner radial Roman hour chapter, outer minute/seconds divisions with Arabic five minutes/seconds numerals, winding aperture above 6 o'clock. Blued steel Breguet hands. M. Rectangular, 13.5 x 12 cm, brass, heavy single weight, five-wheel train, modified Graham dead-beat escapement with jeweled pallets, escape wheel set on the back plate, heavy lentiqulor cylinder pendulum bob mounted to wooden rod, suspended from a double suspension spring mounted to a heavy iron cast bracket fixed to the case, micrometric beat adjustment on the rod. Signed Breguet on the dial, the movement signed Breguet & Comp.ie. Dim. Height 210 cm, base width 50 cm, depth 30 cm.


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Grading System
Grade:
Case: 3

Good

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-01

Good

HANDS Original

Notes

In the advertisement for his clocks Jacob describes himself as a pupil of Berthoud and Breguet. Jacob became famous for his one year-going clocks, which were very rare before the last quarter of the 19th century. They became popular only after the invention of the torsion pendulum. From the mid-18th Century, regulators started to be made by clockmakers not only for observatories but for their own use to set watches and for many of the important houses and country estates. These ?domestic? regulators frequently employed wood rod pendulums with heavy brass bobs. The wood rod pendulum was ideal because, being wood, it was unaffected by changes in temperature, therefore other compensation devices could be fitted ? usually less expensive to make than a compensated metal pendulum. Wood rod pendulums were used on most Vienna wall regulators for this reason.