Important Collectors’ Wristwatches, P...

New York - The Fuller Building, Jun 14, 2007

LOT 288

"Yellow Gold Ref. 5013" Patek Philippe, Genève, No. 1908007, case No. 2928478, Ref. 5013. Made in 1992. Very fine and important, tonneau-shaped, minute repeating, astronomic, self-winding, 18K yellow gold gentleman's wristwatch with perpetual calendar and moon phases, retrograde date, leap year display and an 18K yellow gold Patek Philippe buckle. Accompanied by a mahogany fitted box and certificate.

USD 350,000 - 400,000

EUR 260,000 - 300,000

Sold: USD 383,600

C. Three-body, solid, polished, stepped bezel, concave and curved lugs, sapphire crystal. D. Matte silver with applied yellow gold Breguet numerals, outer minute track, subsidiary seconds, apertures for the day, month, leap year, and moon phases. Yellow gold "Breguet" hands. M. Cal. R 27 PS QR, stamped with the Seal of Geneva quality mark, rhodium-plated, "fausses côtes" decoration, 39 jewels, straight-line lever escapement, free-sprung Gyromax balance adjusted to heat, cold, isochronism and 5 positions, shock absorber, self-compensating flat balance spring, 22K gold micro rotor, repeating on gongs by activating slide on the band. Dial, case and movement signed. Dim. 36 x 46 mm. Thickness 12 mm. Property of an East Coast Collector


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Grading System
Grade:
Case: 2

Very good

Movement: 1

As new

Dial: 1-01

As new

HANDS Original

Notes

Ref. 5013 Production of this reference started in 1992. This reference was, until the introduction of the Sky Moon Tourbillon (Ref. 5002, see lot 289) with 686 parts, the most complex wristwatch Patek Philippe produced. Self-winding, its movement consists of 515 parts and shares similarities with Ref. 5016, the manual-winding retrograde date perpetual calendar with tourbillon and 506 parts, which is more complicated. Both watches incorporate perpetual calendar functions with a retrograde, or flyback, date hand whose specially developed mechanism absorbs almost no energy when the hand returns on the 1st of each month. Month and year indications in the leap year cycle will change instantaneously and if it is always kept running, no adjustments need to be made to the watch until Feb. 28th, 2100 (The moon phase indication will show a deviation of one single day only after 122 years and 45 days). Combining a minute-repeater with a retrograde date function certainly sets this highly complex timepiece apart from other watches and a very small stamp on the balance bridge, the "Geneva Seal" or Geneva quality mark, makes a further important difference. It attests that Ref. 5013 is made according to the highest standards of watchmaking in the world. A similar watch is published in ?Collecting Patek Philippe Wristwatches?, by Osvaldo Patrizzi, Guido Mondani Editore, 2004 edition, page 277. Another similar watch is published in "Patek Philippe Genève, Wristwatches", by Martin Huber and Alan Banbery, 1998 Edition, p. 326.