The Art of American Horology & Colle...

New York, Nov 28, 2001

LOT 50

American Watch Co., Waltham., Mass., AWCo. Grade, No. 999928, circa 1880.Very fine and rare, 18K gold, keyless, hunting-cased watch.

USD 6,000 - 8,000

Sold: USD 6,900

C. four-body, "Empire", box-hinged, band and hinges with vermicelli pattern, bezels engraved with repeated pattern, covers with engraved initials, gold hinged cu0vette. D. white enamel, Roman numerals, outer minute ring, sunk subsidiary seconds, signed "AWCo" in Gothic. Blued steel "American Spade" hands. M. 18 size, nickel, 3/4 plate, damascened, 21 jewels, the top ones in gold settings, straight line lever escapement, cut-bimetallic compensation balance with gold temperature and mean time scres, blued steel Breguet balance spring, gold train, micrometric cam regulator, safety pinion.Signed on the dial and movement. Movement also engraved "Woerd's Pat. Compensating Balance". Diam. 51.8 mm.


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Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 3-14

Good

Damaged

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-01

Good

HANDS Original

Notes

On May 21, 1878, Charles Vander Woerd patented a very interesting bimetallic balance, which was supposed to compensate for middle temperature error. Three horologists, Bandurski of Geneva, Adrien Philippe of Patek Philippe, and Charles Woerd, worked independently on the same idea, which was to introduce in the bimetallic lamina an arrangement that would cause the balance not to expand in a linear manner, as with the regular compensation balance. Since the irregularities caused by the changes inhe elasticity of the balance spring are quadratic, all three horologists tried to make the changes in the balance inertia quadratic as well. The idea was to change the way the forces of bimetallic expansion work; to accomplish this, they needed to change the contact surface between the lamina. All of them chose triangular contact. In Woerd's case, many watchmakers, when cleaning the watch, did not realize how fragile it was, and many were broken. The company replaced them with the highest Americn grade bimetallic balances, superbly polished and with beveled inner edges. The movements chosen to be employed with Woerd's balances were always of the highest standard.