Unit of pressure
used in watch making to indicate water resistance.
Describes the
dimensions and configuration of the movement.
The metal housing
of a watch's parts, including movement, dial and crystal.
A watch that
includes a built-in stopwatch function. Most chronographs have two or three
sub-dials for measuring hours, minutes and seconds. The timer counting seconds
that can be started and stopped to precisely time an event.
A very
high-precision watch. According to the Swiss law, a manufacturer may only put
the word "chronometer" on a model if the watch meets very high standards, and
after each individual piece has passed a series of tests and obtained a running
bulletin and a chronometer certificate by an acknowledged Swiss control
authority, such as the COSC.
The attachment
used to connect the two ends of the watch strap or bracelet around the wrist.
The knob, or
button, on the outside of the watch case that is used to set the time and date.
It is also called a stem or pin. In a mechanical watch the crown winds the
mainspring. A screw-in (or screw-down) crown is used to make a watch more water
resistant.
The protective
cover over the watch face. Could be acrylic crystal, mineral crystal or
sapphire crystal. Acrylic crystal is plastic and scratches easily. Mineral
crystal is comprised of several elements, heat-treated for hardness and extra
durability. Sapphire crystal is the most durable and most expensive.
Face of a watch,
on which time and further functions are displayed by markers, hands, discs or
through windows.
A watch that
shows the time through digits, rather than a dial and hands.
A watch that is
water resistant to 200M, has a one-way rotating bezel and a screw-on crown and
back, has a metal bracelet or rubber strap.
A watch that
displays two time zones, to simultaneously keep track of local time and time in
another country.
A feature
combined with chronograph functions that allows for a new measurement starting
from zero by pressing down a single pusher, without stopping, zeroing and
restarting the whole mechanism.
Hinged and
jointed element, normally of the same material as the one used for the case. It
allows easy fastening of the bracelet on the wrist.
Greenwich Mean
Time. As a feature of watches, it means that two or more time zones are
displayed.
Decoration of
dials, rotors or case parts consisting of patterns made by hand or
engine-turned. By the thin pattern of the resulting engravings & consisting of
crossing or interlaced lines.
Indicator for the
analog visualization of hours, minutes, and seconds as well as other functions.
Valve inserted in
the case of some professional diving watches to discharge the helium contained
in the air mixture inhaled by divers.
The science of
time measurement, including the art of designing and constructing timepieces.
Synthetic
sapphires or rubies that are used as bearings for gears in a mechanical watch.
The jewels reduce friction to make the watch more accurate and longer lasting.
Feature
concerning the digital display of time in a window. The indication changes
almost instantaneously at every hour.
Double extension
of the case middle by which a strap or bracelet is attached.
Materials applied
on hour markers or hands, emitting the luminous energy previously absorbed as
electromagnetic light rays.
Together with the
barrel, makes up the driving element of a movement. It stores and transmits the
power force needed for its functioning.
A mechanical in
which winding is performed by hand. The motion transmitted from the user's
fingers to the crown is forwarded to the movement through the winding stem to
the barrel, through a series of gears to the mainspring.
Elements printed
or applied on the dial, sometimes they are luminescent, used as reference
points for the hands to indicate hours and minute intervals.
A movement
powered by a mainspring, working in conjunction with a balance wheel.
Mineral crystal
is comprised of several elements, heat-treated for hardness and extra
durability.
Mechanism
indicating time by acoustic sounds. Contrary to the watches provided with
en-passant sonnerie devices that strike the number of hours automatically,
repeaters work on demand by actuating a slide or pusher positioned on the case
side. Repeaters typically have two hammers and two gongs, one for minutes and
one for hours. Quarters are indicated by the simultaneous strike of both
hammers.
An indicator that
keeps track of the phases of the moon. A regular rotation of the moon around
the earth is once every 29 days, 12 hours and 44 minutes.
The entire
mechanism of a watch. Movements are either quartz or mechanical manual or
automatic winding devices.
The travel of the
balance wheel from one extreme to another, and back again.
The time a watch
will run with a fully-charged power supply. Duration in hours of the residual
functioning autonomy of a movement after it has reached the winding peak. The
duration value is displayed by either an analog or digital instantaneous
indicator. The related mechanism is made up of a series of gears linking the
winding barrel and hand.
Mechanical
element mounted on a case for the control of specific functions.
A movement
powered by a quartz crystal that keeps very accurate time.
Used to describe
a pointer hand on a watch dial, which returns to zero at the end of a defined
period.
A bezel that can
be turned, sometimes both clockwise and counterclockwise.
In automatic
winding mechanical movements the rotor is the part that by its complete or
partial revolutions and the movements of the arm, allows the winding of the
mainspring.
Sapphire crystal
is the most durable, most scratch-proof and most expensive.
A crown used to
make a watch more water resistant. The seal is achieved by matching a threaded
pipe in the case with the crown's internal threads and creating a gasket while
twisting the crown to lock it in place.
A watch with the
ability to withstand a high impact.
Watches whose
bridges and pillar plates are cut out in a decorative manner, thus revealing
all the parts of the movement.
Additional hand
superimposed on the chronograph hand, used for timing simultaneous events that
begin at the same time and end at different times.
A watch with a
second hand that measures intervals of time. When a stopwatch is incorporated
into a standard watch, it is referred to as a chronograph.
A small
additional dial or indicator that may be positioned or placed off-center on the
main dial, used for the display of various functions.
A center second
hand mounted on the center of the main dial.
Function that
measures the speed at which the wearer has traveled over a given distance. The
scale is calibrated to show the speed of a moving object over a known distance.
The standard length on which the calibration is based is shown on the dial -
ex: 100, 200 or 1,000 meters.
Barrel shaped
watch case with straight, shorter, horizontal sides and curved, longer,
vertical sides.
The function that
equalizes position errors due to changing positions of a watch, and related
effects of gravity, to ensure accuracy. The round carriage of the tourbillion
holds the mechanisms that rotate the wheels, and thus the hands of the watch,
at a continuous rate of once per minute.
A watch whose
case is designed to resist infiltration by water.
Element
transmitting motion from the crown to the gears governing manual winding and
setting.
Additional
feature of a watch with GMT function, displaying the 24 time zones on the dial
or bezel, each referenced by a city name, providing instantaneous reading of
the time in any country.
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