Important Collectors Watches, Pocket ...

Hong Kong, Jun 08, 2008

LOT 57

Vacheron & Constantin, Genève, No. 455035, case No. 286513. Made in the 1940s. Fine, large, silver-cased keyless deck lever chronometer with indirect centre seconds and Guillaume balance. To be sold without reserve

HKD 23,000 - 30,000

USD 3,000 - 4,000 / EUR 1,800 - 2,500

Sold: HKD 26,400

C. Four-body, massive, "bassine", polished. Hinged silver cuvette. D. Brushed silver with champleve Arabic numerals, outer minute and seconds divisions and Arabic five minute/second numerals. Blued steel spade hands. M. 21"' gilt, fausses cotes decoration, 20 jewels, straight-line lever escapement, anibal-brass Guillaume balance with gold temperature and meantime adjustment screws, blued steel Breguet balance spring, swan-neck micrometer regulator. Dial, case and movement signed. Diam. 60 mm


LOADING IMAGES
Click to full view
Image

Grading System
Grade: AA

Very good

Case: 3

Good

Movement: 3**

Good

Repair required, at buyer's expense

Dial: 4-9-15-01

Fair

Scratched

Slightly rusted

HANDS Original

Notes

Anibal-Brass Guillaume Balance
IInvented by the Nobel prize winner Dr. Charles Edouard Guillaume, it exhibits unusual properties, both in terms of thermal expansion and in changes in elasticity. These properties are very different from those of two other famous alloys invented by Guillaume, Invar and Elinvar. Around 1900 Guillaume attempted to eliminate the so-called middle temperature error caused by the fact that the change of rate in a timekeeper with a steel-brass bimetallic balance is approximately a linear function of temperature, while the change of rate caused by change in elasticity of a balance spring is approximately a quadratic function. Thus, it equals zero at only two temperatures, causing secondary error. Countless attempts were made to eliminate middle temperature error, usually by means of auxiliary compensation devices. In 1899, Guillaume noticed that steel with an addition of 44.4% nickel had a negative square coefficient of thermal expansion. This alloy, combined with brass in bimetallic lamina, makes its expansion close to quadratic. Balances with bimetallic rims made of anibal and brass are usually called Guillaume balances, or, as their inventor called them, integral balances. When combined with special balance springs, they exhibit remarkable temperature stability, on occasion not exceeding 1/50 second per day at 1oC.