Very Important Early Omega ElectroQuartz, Rare

Omega Quartz Table-Clock: Pre-Beta21 ElectroQuartz f8192


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A horological milestone, an industrial-history artefact and Omegas first watch / clock made in January 1970 (serial number 32'005'XXX): Omega ElectroQuartz f8192 -- more than four month before they released the first Swiss quartz-watch Beta21 in April 1970 altogether with the joint-venture partners of CEH: IWC, Longines, Patek, Piaget, Rolex, Zenith and some others. So, what we have here is the first publicly offered Omega Quartz-Clock -- important!

Next to the fact this model was made just in very few examples (some say around 10, with one in Omega Museum and another at Swiss Time Services in the UK (see Wikipedia: Omega ElectroQuartz), but I personally think they made some more) its importance is obvious -- and there are probably not many watches / clocks that have such a deep industrial-historical mark -- see our blog for details. And we are especially happy we could offer one more in the same year.

Furthermore, there are some very remarkable aspects with this clock:

- inside it has a approx 50mm*10mm oblong aluminium-box holding the 8'192Hz swinging quartz;

- it had a stepper-motor, so the hands move one step every second;

- second-hacking feature allows time-setting to the second;

The movement works perfect and precise in every aspect: The date and date-quickset work fine as does the seconds-hacking feature. Important: The plastic case (thermoplastic Cycolac resin) pin-holder is missing. But this is a very common problem with these and not obviously recognizable -- rather a design- & construction-mistake obviously, than bad treatment in the last five decades.

The special thing here: It comes with its original red Omega box and the original booklet -- amazing.


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