Notes
"Flying Tourbillon"
In the early 1920s Albert Helwig, Technical Director of the Deutsche Uhrmacherschule invented what is now commonly known as a flying tourbillon:
??My idea of constructing the free-standing cage that is without a bridge, was to make a tourbillon as flat as possible ? The weight
of the cage is only 700 milligrams; no one believed that it would be strong enough. Therefore, I tied a string on one side of the cage and another
one on the other side but with a weight of 250 grams. I then hung this in the display case at the entrance hall to the Deutsche Uhrmacherschule
and left it hanging there for 4 weeks, which stopped all critics?? Flying tourbillons were made as masterpieces by the best students of the
Deutsche Uhrmacherschule in Glashütte, according to the principals and under the direction of Professor Alfred Helwig. They represent the
ultimate achievement in the making of revolving escapements.
Alfred Helwig
One of the most eminent
German precision watchmakers.
He was apprenticed
to Master Watchmaker
Gustav Dunkel from 1900-
1904, then entered the
Deutsche Uhrmacherschule,
which he finished the following
year. His great ability was
noticed by Bavarian Master
Watchmaker Georg Braun, who
offered him a position in his firm.
However, one year later the young
Helwig returned to Glashütte and
found employment in the Glashütter
Präzisions-Uhrenfabrik AG, where he
worked until 1908. During this time
his horological interests evolved and he
began to focus on chronometry. For that
reason he went to Hamburg to acquire
practical knowledge in the production of
precision timekeepers, working for a year
at the Chronometerwerke Hamburg. In
1909 he returned to Glashütte to polish his
knowledge, returning afterwards to the
Glashütter Präzisions-Uhrenfabrik for 2
years. During this time he also became an
independent chronometer maker. On April 1,
1913, he found the fitting place for his talents at
the Deutsche Uhrmacherschule, where in time he
became professor and director of practical watchmaking,
staying until his retirement. During WW I he
was drafted, but as soon as the war ended he came back
to the school. Very organized and disciplined, as demanding
of himself as he was of his students, he knew how to
encourage them to work to the best of their capabilities, while
conserving their enthusiasm for horology. From own experience he
knew exactly how a talent is best nourished and he employed this understanding
with great success. In the workshop he hung up the motto: ?We
don?t train only watchmakers, we train watchmakers to become extraordinary
people with character?. Despite his professional discipline he was also
very understanding and he allowed his students small pleasures, even if they
were not exactly within the school philosophy. For instance, in the middle of
summer he would allow a student to go and buy ice cream for the entire
class. To avoid the school director?s anger, he gave the student an empty
marine chronometer box to hide the ice cream in. When the director
intercepted the student in the entry hall, he thought that the student
was carrying a fragile and expensive marine chronometer and
allowed him to pass. During Helwig?s years at the school many
wonderful improvements in the field of horology were done by his
students as well as himself and many excellent watches were built.
In 1922 Helwig became a master. After WW II and under Communist
rule, he was so appreciated that on his 64th birthday, his students all
donated their monthly rations (in Eastern Germany food was
rationed then) to make a large cake for him. Helwig wrote articles,
pamphlets and books, of which the best known is
?Drehganguhren? and ?Die Feinstellung?, coauthored
with Dr. K. Giebel (the ice-cream opposing
director), which is one of the most
comprehensive works on technical watchmaking.
He was an enthusiastic advocate
of automobiles, being the second in
Glashütte, after Emil Lange, to have a
driver?s license and he worked on car
engines, probably with the same
precision as he worked on watches.
In one of his letters he writes: ?I
used to have a Bugatti (1925) and
whenever I drove through
Glashütte people hid behind their
curtains and made the sign of
the cross?. Alfred Helwig died
on May 18, 1974, and was
laid to rest with other accomplished
members of the
DUR. On the 25th anniversary
of his death Glashütte
Original introduced a
new model, called
?Helwig?, employing
his flying tourbillon.
Only 25 pieces were
made.