Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces

Geneva, Nov 08, 2015

LOT 239

PATEK PHILIPPE REF. 725, "AMERICAN" DIGITAL PERPETUAL CALENDAR YELLOW GOLD Patek Philippe, Genève, movement No. 931098, case No. 691638. Ref. 725. Made in 1951. Extremely fine and very rare, 18K yellow gold, keyless dress watch with linear digital perpetual calendar and moon phases. Accompanied by the Extract from the Archives.

CHF 35,000 - 55,000

HKD 280,000 - 440,000 / USD 36,000 - 57,000

Sold: CHF 88,750

Three-body, "moderne" with concave bezel, polished and brushed, correctors on the flat band, inverted U-shaped bow. Brushed silver, applied yellow gold faceted baton indexes, outer minute divisions, aperture for the digital display of days of the week, months and date, aperture at 6 for phases of the moon concentric with subsidiary seconds. Yellow gold dauphine hands. Cal. 17''' 170, rhodium-plated, fausses cotes decoration, 18 jewels, straight-line lever escapement, cut bimetallic compensation balance adjusted to heat, cold, isochronism and five positions, self-compensating blued steel Breguet balance spring, swan-neck micrometric regulator.


LOADING IMAGES
Click to full view
Image

Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 2

Very good

Movement: 2*

Very good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 2-17-01

Very good

Slightly spotted

HANDS Original

Notes

Dial, case and movement signed. DIAM. 46 mm. REFERENCE 725 and the nearly identical reference 725/2 were in production from 1940 until around 1964. To date, less than 20 examples of this model are known to have survived. The reference 725 is the scarcer of the two references, the difference is that the calendar aperture on this model has rounded ends instead of square ends. The watch with the ascending number to the present watch, 931099 was sold at CHRISTIE'S, Geneva, November 15, 2010, lot 347. THE AMERICAN PERPETUAL CALENDAR The linear digital calendar or so-called AMERICAN CALENDAR is a calendar in which the date is displayed in a single linear aperture allowing for a clearly legible dial which could be read at a glance. This type of display was invented in the early Art Deco period and is most often found in watches destined for the Anglo-American market. This kind of calendar became popular once again after the second World War.