Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces

Hong Kong, May 10, 2020

LOT 328

Omega Pocket chronometer, calibre 43.15 S; “Grade Very Best”; limited production of 300 pieces; 14K yellow gold

HKD 156,000 - 190,000

USD 19,800 - 24,300 / EUR 18,000 - 22,000 / CHF 19,800 - 24,300

14K yellow gold, hunting-case, keyless-winding, round-shaped, pocket chronometer, with subsidiary seconds at 6. White enamel dial with suspended “Breguet” numerals, with the word “Chronomètre” in red at 12 o’clock. Cover and case-back polished; case-back engraved in taille-douce (fine cut) with the cypher “G H”; cuvette (dome) engraved in taille-douce (fine cut) with the mention “Chronomètre Omega”. Movement 18’’’, calibre 43.15 S, “Grade Very Best”, rhodium-plated, 23 jewels, going barrel with safety pinion, gold train of wheels, gold screwed-chatons (setting), straight-line equilibrated lever escapement, cut bimetallic compensated balance with gold poising screws and blued steel Breguet hairspring, index regulator with swan-neck spring and precision-regulating device for fast / slow by means of an eccentric snail, adjusted to 6 positions and temperatures.


Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 2

Very good

Movement: 2 *
Dial: 2-01

Very good

HANDS Original

Brand Omega, Bienne / Biel

Model “Grade Very Best”

Year Circa 1921-1922 and 1935

Movement No. 5 983 813

Case No. 7 608 910

Material 14K yellow gold

Diameter 52.2 mm.

Caliber 43.15 S, “Grade Very Best”, lever escapement, adjusted to 6 positions and temperatures

Signature dial, case and movement

Accessories original fitted box (Armand Aubert, Joaillier-Orfèvre, Nantes); Bulletin de marche (Watch rate certificate) No. 3 555, from the Bureau Officiel de Contrôle de la Marche des Montres from Bienne / Biel (dated , November 30, 1936)

Notes

Cal. 43.15 S “Grade Very Best”
The “Grade Very Best” replaced the “DDR” as Omega’s highest quality chronometer movement in July 1922. This calibre was made in 600 examples: 300 “Lépine” movements (for open-face watch) and 300 “savonnette” movements (for hunting-case watch).
The term “Very Best” was trademarked by Omega for dials, cases and movements in 1904.
The present watch cost 1 085 Swiss francs in 1929.By way of comparison, that same year Tiffany & Co. sold a Patek Philippe minute-repeating perpetual calendar pocket watch with moon phases, split-seconds chronograph and 30-minute recorder for 2 835 Swiss francs, and a standard 18K gold hunting-case pocket watch with 20’’’ movements could be bought for 385 Swiss francs.
The fact that this watch cost nearly 40 % as much as a highly complicated Patek Philippe and over four times as much as that company’s standard production is due to the cost of manufacturing such a high-precision movement.
Precision movements are made to much smaller mechanical tolerances than standard watch movements and often take as long to manufacture and regulate as complicated movements. Precision watches were also prized possessions and were often reserved for the manufacturer’s best clients.