IWC PD Ocean 2000 og fifty fatom
#1
Jeg har lige brugt 4 fulde dage på af surfe og drømme om Blancpain fifty fatom. 

De har lavet et hav af modeller gennem årene, men se lige på de model de lavede til tyskerne.

I modsætning til alle ander har den kun een markering: en trekant på lynetten.

Derudover har den kronen ved 4-tallet, orange stor viser, og en rød cirkel vedr. radioaktivitet.

IWC's militærur (en af modellerne) har præces samme karaketeristika. 

Er det mon kopiering eller blot kundens krav..... Under alle omstændigheder er FF alle dykkerurenes inspiration, en imponerende historie båret af passion, hvor IWC er mere perfektion og robusthed.

Helt sikkert to spændene ure som både den tyske hær og Jacque costeau begge har båret..jeg må ha et FF :-( $$$

Bare en tanke..

Jens
Rolex Cosmograph Daytona, rolesor
Omega Speedmaster, Racing
Omega Quatz Seamaster multifunction (g/s)
IWC Ocean 2000
IWC guld lommeur (arv)
Breitling Chrono Jetstream
Breitling Navitimer World (blå)
L&V guld lommeur (arv)
Patek Phillip Nautilus (g/s)


Svar
#2
No radiation logoet og viseren må være kundens krav.

Ved ikke om den trekantede lünette markering har været det også. Det kunne man tro, da uret med kun den ene markering faktisk ikke lever op til ISO standarden for dykkerure.
Lever i min egen lille dykkerklokke..
Svar
#3
Ja, der er stof til mange timers studier. Den største ekspertise på militærure finder man hos Konrad Knirim. Han har skrevet to bøger om emnet. Jeg tillader mig at citere lidt fra hans spændende hjemmeside:

http://www.knirim.de

"In former times before the brand Blancpain of the Rayville SA in Villeret, Switzerland, vanished and later was brought back by Jean Claude Biver, combat swimmer watches - "Fifty Fathoms" -were produced in different variants. The dial has a circle mark at the "6" with a lakmus wetness indicator to control water resistance. The first and smartest model of the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms (Bundeswehr order no: 6645-12-129-8664) has matt nickeled steel with a broad bezel and black plastic inlet and 5-minute marks, screwed back (but the handle is not screwed) and has a very nice finished movement from Anton Schild in Grenchen (AS 1712) with date indication. The case is like that of the very rare pilot's chronograph sister model, Blancpain Air Command. This watch is used as well by the U.S. Navy's underwater demolition teams. Martin Whitney shows in his book, Military Time Pieces, an example without date but with the wetness indicator with the marks Mil-W-22176A(3), Type Class, Tornak-Rayville, 4220-00900-9629. This watch was used by the French at Toulon. Nowadays you can find at auctions some remakes of this watch with new movements.

The second type of the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms of the Federal Navy (6645-12-149-5012) with a more simple movement, cal. AS 1700, without date and without screwed handle, was used by the French and by Jacques-Yves Cousteau for his nautical research. The model shown here has the wetness indicator. The third Blanc-pain combat divers watch that I know of (6645-12-171-4162) has the asymmetric and screwed handle at the 4, as does the IWC. The movement is a 24jewd, cal. CD 2873 of ETA, with date indication. Some characteristics like the JWC Ocean 2000: the handle position, the black bezel with one single fluorescent mark and the red minute hand. In comparison to the JWC, the bezel does not turn clockwise. The watch has (as does the IWC and the pilots wrist chronographs of the Federal Air Force) the red mark for radioactivity, 3H in a red circle, that indicates the tritium layer of fluorescent digits and hands."

JK
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