enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. L'impermeable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L'impermeable

    Waterproof (or water-resistant) describes objects unaffected by water or resisting water passage, or which are covered with a material that resists or does not allow water passage. In horology, the waterproofness of a watch is defined by its resistance under pressure.

  3. Water Resistant mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Resistant_mark

    WATER RESISTANT marking on the back of a Victorinox wristwatch. Water Resistant is a common mark stamped on the back of wrist watches to indicate how well a watch is sealed against the ingress of water. It is usually accompanied by an indication of the static test pressure that a sample of newly manufactured watches were exposed to in a leakage ...

  4. History of watches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_watches

    Thomas Mudge, inventor of the lever escapement. The lever escapement, invented by Thomas Mudge in 1754 [18] and improved by Josiah Emery in 1785, gradually came into use from about 1800 onwards, chiefly in Britain; it was also adopted by Abraham-Louis Breguet, but Swiss watchmakers (who by now were the chief suppliers of watches to most of Europe) mostly adhered to the cylinder until the 1860s.

  5. Watch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watch

    The watches are tested in static or still water under 125% of the rated (water) pressure, thus a watch with a 200-metre rating will be water-resistant if it is stationary and under 250 metres of static water. The testing of the water-resistance is fundamentally different from non-dive watches, because every watch has to be fully tested.

  6. Gallet Clamshell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallet_Clamshell

    1939 advertisement from Jewelers' Circular Keystone magazine of the Gallet MultiChron 30 "Clamshell", the world's first water resistant chronograph wristwatch Reverse view of the Gallet Clamshell showing the 4 screws that compress the 2 part case around the flared acrylic crystal Open view of the Gallet Clamshell showing top part of the two part case and complex Swiss column wheel movement ...

  7. Waterproof wristlet watch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterproof_wristlet_watch

    The obvious characteristics of a trench watch were that they were repurposed small sized (size 0, 7.5 Ligne, 29.62mm) pocket watches protected with crude metal used to protect the glass crystal covering the dial. The invention of the trench watch precipitated the invention of the wrist watch, and these watches were adopted by both the public ...

  8. Diving watch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diving_watch

    A diving watch, also commonly referred to as a diver's or dive watch, is a watch designed for underwater diving that features, as a minimum, a water resistance greater than 1.1 MPa (11 atm), the equivalent of 100 m (330 ft). The typical diver's watch will have a water resistance of around 200 to 300 m (660 to 980 ft), though modern technology ...

  9. US military watches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_military_watches

    Military watches are believed to have received their name from a German military request for a soldier in a watch house, otherwise known as a guard tower. One story tells that the military wristwatches came into use when a German naval officer needed to know the time but could not pull out a pocket watch since both his hands were busy operating the machine.