Slideshow on Tag Heuer Series

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Slideshow on Cartier, Girard-Perregaux, Rolex & other luxury watch

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Monday, May 30, 2011

Rolex Daytona Comparison 16523 vs 116523

How Your Rolex Was Made

Rolex Submariner Vs Seiko Diver 100

Omega Seamaster Automatic Watch Review

Breitling Navitimer Datora Watch Review Video

IWC Portuguese Chrono Review

Breitling Navitimer Silver Dial Watch

Rolex Day-Date President 18K Gold Watch Review

Rolex GMT Master II Review

Fake Rolex Compared to Real

Rolex GMT Master II Compared Real and FAKE Part 2 of 3

Rolex GMT Master II Compared Real and FAKE Part 3 of 3

Rolex GMT Master II Compared Real and FAKE Part 1 of 3

Rolex Submariner Vs Seiko Diver 100

Longines Hydroconquest L3.642.4.96.6 Watch Review

Longines Hydroconquest Movement L633.5 (ETA 2824-2 Qualitätsstufe "TOP")

Friday, May 27, 2011

What is the difference between a Chronometer and a Chronograph?

These two similar terms are both used with watches and are easily confused.

The simple answer is that a chronometer is a certified accurate timepiece, a chronograph is a timepiece with stopwatch functions. So for any watch, one, both, or neither terms may apply.

Chronograph
Any watch with stopwatch functions can be called a chronograph. This has nothing to do with any measurement of accuracy, it is merely a statement that the watch has this function.

In watch industry terms, the elapsed time measurement functions of a chronograph are some of the many 'complications' beyond the basic timekeeping functions of a watch mechanism. Even watches with quartz movements may implement these complications through mechanical gears, wheels, and dials. Other watch complications include date indicators, alarms, moon phase displays, multiple time zone features, and other time-related measurements shown with additional hands, windows, or sub-dials on the watch.

Chronometer
The first need for very accurate timepieces came from ships needing precision timekeeping to allow precise celestial navigation. The term chronometer came in to use to describe timepieces accurate enough for ship navigation. In 1973, the Controle Officiel Suisse des Chronometeres (COSC) came in to existence as the official testing and certification control board.

Now, only a watch whose movement has been certified by COSC can be called a chronometer. For a typical men's-sized mechanical watch movement, it must have stayed within -4 to +6 seconds of variation per day during the COSC measurement at various temperatures and positions.

COSC also certifies quartz movements (their standard is +/-0.2 second per day for these). But since quartz movements are inherently very accurate and suffer little to no variation based on position or normal temperature ranges, certification is much less significant to buyers of quartz movement watches. Almost no watchmakers go to the expense to have COSC certify their quartz movements.

A chronometer certificate is not a guarantee of future accuracy. Watch movements that have been certified can get out of adjustment and perform poorly. Movements that were not certified may still exceed the COSC standards--the manufacturer may simply have simply chosen to bypass the expense of the certification process.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

TAG Heuer Grand Carrera

Tag Heuer Grand Carrera Chronograph Calibre 17 RS2 Limited Edition automatic chronograph watch

A Brief History of TAG Heuer Watches

TAG Heuer New Link Collection

Tag Heuer Movement

Patek Philippe - Birth of a Legend

Patek Philippe - Star Caliber

Hublot Limited Editions Part ONE

Limited Editions Part 2 - Ayrton Senna

Limited Editions Part 3 - The All Black

Limited Editions Part 4 - Generation Tourbillon

Introducing the UR-110 "Torpedo" by URWERK

Urwerk 202 Automatic - Twin Turbine Hammerhead

Jaeger Lecoultre Gyrotourbillon

IWC Skeleton Portuguese Minute Repeater

OMEGA Speedmaster PROFESSIONAL

Omega Speedsonic f300Hz

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