Bulova Accutron Spaceview

Source: Plus Ultra
Condition: Very good
Year of Production: 1966
Case Size: 36mm
Case Material: Stainless steel
Dial Color: Skeletonized
Bracelet/Strap: Leather
Movement Type: Quartz
Box: No
Papers: No
Location: Switzerland
Description

Bulova SpaceView Accutron: Electronic Skeleton, Tuningfork Bulova Accutron SpaceView: Electronic Skeleton, Tuningfork

ID : EG450134BASVS Brand : Bulova Model : Accutron SpaceView: Electronic Skeleton, Tuningfork Year : 1966 Condition : Very good Delivery : Watch Type : Quartz Caliber : 214 Functions : Time (Hour, Minute, Central Second) Diameter : 36mm Case : Steel Bezel : Steel Bracelet : Leather with Original Buckle Dial Color : Skeleton Glass : Plexi Made in 1966 (M6) and housing the important Bulova cal214 -- the first tuningfork-movement presented by Bulova in 1961 and also the first electronic watch-movement and thus the first step on the way to quartz, reliability and highest precision. The 1966-made watch is in very good condition and working reliable and precise almost six decades later. And in general with tuningfork-movements, the 360Hz vibration is not only audible but also could be felt with fine fingertips. Yes, she can hear it, but she has to come very very close with her beautiful ear; and yes, she can feel the humming when she puts her soft finger-tips on your wrist. Well, technologically it is a blast anyway: 80m copper-wire on each coil -- 160m in total --, a ratchet-wheel with 300 teeth and just 1.3mm in diameter, the Raytheon-made Germanium-transistor and precise to 2s / day. A blast that you missed all the years in horology that you just looked on mechanical watches, excluding everything electronic because of the blinders put on your eyes by the dogmatic high-priests of horology: "It has no soul, if it has no balance (die Unruh).", they said. "Haaaaa!", responded the Agnostic before falling off the chair, holding his stomach from laughing. Anyway, in the wonderful technology of tuningfork-movements is around since Max Hetzel invented it in the 1950s and Bulova made his idea a marketable product in 1961 -- details about this fascinating genre in our blog. And so it is fair to say, 1961 is the moment when most watchmakers changed their selling-point from "Precision" to something more flexible, fluid and emotional ("Soul of a Watch", "Traditional", "Characteristically Unprecise", "Perfect Imperfect") for a reason: because mechanical watches could not compete with electronics in this category "Precision", that was the cornerstone and center of efforts in all horology before. Needless to point out that this transition from something measurable to something more emotional & spiritual was not successful for most of the industry ("Quartz Crisis").