Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces

Geneva, May 15, 2016

LOT 422

BREGUET NO. 3327 - QUARTER REPEATING WATCH Breguet et Fils, No. 3327, 'Repètition'. Very fine and rare, quarter-repeating, 18K gold pocket watch with 'English-type' ruby cylinder escapement, and ratchet key. Sold to Monsieur Dupont pour 1'400 francs.

CHF 15,000 - 25,000

HKD 120,000 - 200,000 / USD 16,000 - 26,000

Sold: CHF 18,750

Four-body, 'forme collier', polished bezel, engine-turned flat band, the back engine-turned 'grains d'orge'. Hinged gilded cuvette. Silver, engine-turned with radial Roman numerals on a brushed chapter ring, outer dot minute divisions. Blued steel Breguet hands. 47 mm., matte gilt, standing barrel, English-type ruby cylinder escapement, the escape wheel and balance wheel with jeweled pivots, three-arm balance with pare-chute suspension on the upper pivot, blued steel flat balance spring, blued steel index regulator with bimetallic compensation curb, repeating on two gongs with two polished steel hammers activated by a pull-and-twist piston in the pendant.


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Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 2-8

Very good

Slightly scratched

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-10-01

Good

Patinated

HANDS Original

Notes

Dial and cuvette, signed, case and cuvette numbered. DIAM. 53 mm. THICKNESS 15 mm. BREGUET AND THE CYLINDER ESCAPEMENT Breguet used the cylinder escapement throughout his life. Like the virgule, it is a frictional rest escapement but of a far superior kind. In reality, the cylinder escapement as made by the English makers was not much better than the verge. This was because the diameter of the cylinder was too great in relation to the diameter of the balance, causing a loss of energy through friction. To reduce the friction, the English makers, who were very skilled in the art of jeweling, made the cylinder half-section ruby. The ruby was fitted into a steel frame - it was this form of cylinder escapement first used by Breguet. By about 1795 Breguet had developed the ruby cylinder to the very familiar "overhanging" ruby cylinder; it is therefore rare to find this escapement at such a late date. These escapements performed so well and with such increased consistency of rate that temperature errors previously swamped by general bad performance now needed correction. For this reason, except in his smallest watches, Breguet's ruby cylinder escapements use a compensation curb.