Importantes Montres de Collection

Geneva, Nov 13, 2011

LOT 362

ROLEX, REF. 5514, COMEX NO 486, THE PERSONAL WATCH OF PATRICK RAUDE Rolex, ?Oyster Perpetual, COMEX, 660ft=200m, Submariner?, Ref. 5514/5513, case No. 4155922. Made in 1972. Very fine and very rare, water-resistant, center seconds, self-winding, stainless steel diver's wristwatch with first generation helium escape valve, and a stainless steel Rolex Oyster fliplock bracelet. Accompanied by a Rolex Geneva service invoice (now void, dated 2005), a photocopy of Mr Raude's passport, the original sale invoice from Mr Raude to the previous owner in 2002 and an original Rolex advertisement from circa 1985.

CHF 50,000 - 70,000

USD 55,000 - 75,000 / EUR 40,000 - 55,000

Sold: CHF 74,500

C. Three-body, polished and brushed, screw-down case back, screw-down triplock crown with Crown Guard, graduated bi-directional revolving black bezel for the decompression times, helium escape valve, case back engraved: Rolex Comex 486. D. Black with painted luminous round, triangular and baton indexes. Luminous steel skeleton hands. M. Cal. 1520, rhodium-plated, 26 jewels, straight-line lever escapement, monometallic balance, shock-absorber, self-compensating flat balance spring, hack mechanism. Dial, case and movement signed. Reference between the lugs 5514, in the case back 5513. Diam. 40 mm. Thickness 14 mm. Approx. overall length 180 mm.


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Grading System
Grade:
Case: 3

Good

Movement: 2*

Very good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 2-01

Very good

HANDS Original

Notes

Patrick Raude was a combat diver in the Marine Nationale before joining Comex and working for them 25 years. He took part in the historic Janus IV operation establising a new world record at the time at 460m
The Janus IV Operation The Janus IV Operation, organized by Comex comprised two phases. The experimental phase took place in December 1976, in Comex?s Hyperbare experimental center in Marseille. Comex divers Jacques Verpeaux, Patrick Raude, Louis Schneider, Philippe Jeantot, Vito Lentini, and John Mac Kenna, as well as two divers from the French Marines, Emile Sevellec and Gérard Vial,took part in tests and exercises inside a sphere fi lled with water. The pressures they experienced were equivalent to those at 430 to 480 meters. The practical phase of the operation was carried out in the Mediterranean, off the coast of Cavalaire in France. The divers were Jacques Verpeaux, Patrick Raude, Louis Schneider, Philippe Jeantot, Emile Sevellec and Gérard Vial. The saturation chambers that they were to live in for the entire operation were slowly pressurized to the pressure experienced at below 430 meters of sea water. Then their vessel, the Petrel, made its way toward the site of the operation. The fi rst diving team was made up of Patrick Raude, Jacques Verpeaux and Gérard Vial. All three went down to 460 meters in the open sea. Over the next three days, several successful dives down to 460 meters were made, during which the divers installed a mechanical and hydraulic subma-rine pipeline, carrying out tests of underwater soldering procedures. On the evening of October 19, 1977, as the divers were resting in their chamber, Comex director Henri Germain Delauze told them over the loud-speaker how pleased Comex was with the results. He further announced that Comex?s scientifi c committee had decided to attempt a descent to the never-before attained depth of 500 meters. He asked the six divers if they agreed to try, and all volunteered to do so. The following morning, Jacques Verpeaux was chosen for the fi rst dive, and Gérard Vial for the second. As they descended, the pressure was brought from that of 430 meters (the pressure of the chambers they had been living in) to that of 490 meters. Jacques Verpeaux made his dive, and the registers on the surface indicated he had reached a depth of -501 meters, an exploit never before accomplished. A record had been beaten, and all the sirens of the Petrel and the accompanying boats went off in celebration. Verpeaux smiled for the cameras, then took up a plastic slate and wrote ?Janus IV, 500 meters, 1647 feet?. Ten days later, the divers were acclaimed by an enthusiastic crowd. The Janus IV Operation was the last diving test made in the open seas using Trimix Helium, which was principally made up of helium, with oxygen and a tiny percentage of nitrogen. It helped deter-mine the limits of human intervention in diving technology. This is a truly exceptional watch with unquestionable provenance that helped shape the history of professional diving.