Difference between revisions of "Longines Ultra-Chron"

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Released in 1967, one year after the Gyromatic, the Ultra-Chron’s special lubricant—molybdenum bi-sulphide—solved the friction issue that plagued the early hi-beat movements. Advertisements touted the Ultra-Chron’s accuracy to “within a minute a month.”
 
Released in 1967, one year after the Gyromatic, the Ultra-Chron’s special lubricant—molybdenum bi-sulphide—solved the friction issue that plagued the early hi-beat movements. Advertisements touted the Ultra-Chron’s accuracy to “within a minute a month.”
  
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==Brief History==
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Debuting in 1967, the Ultra-Chron was built to celebrate Longines’ centenary. With Girard-Perregaux’s Gyromatic debuting a year before and Seiko’s Lord Marvel around the same time, the Ultra-Chron was one of the earliest watches to operate at 36,000 bph at a time when the standard was just half that. When it debuted, Longines claimed in its advertisements that the Ultra-Chron was “the world’s most accurate watch,” and was guaranteed accurate to within a minute per month (or about two seconds per day).
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The high-beat revolution didn’t catch on so much beyond the late ’60s and early ’70s, perhaps due to the growing ubiquity of the quartz watch, but the Ultra-Chron did remain in production well into the 1970s.
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==Notable Ultra-Chron Models==
 
Reference 7970-5, was released in the late 1960s. The hi-beat Calibre 461 movement is housed in a cushion case surmounted with a Bakelite bezel in vibrant orange and black. Though rare, the Reference 7970-5 is not as rare as the manufacture’s other vintage diver—the SuperCompressor, Reference 7150-1
 
Reference 7970-5, was released in the late 1960s. The hi-beat Calibre 461 movement is housed in a cushion case surmounted with a Bakelite bezel in vibrant orange and black. Though rare, the Reference 7970-5 is not as rare as the manufacture’s other vintage diver—the SuperCompressor, Reference 7150-1
  

Revision as of 20:02, 8 June 2020

Longines ultrachron.jpg

Longines Ultra-Chron

Released in 1967, one year after the Gyromatic, the Ultra-Chron’s special lubricant—molybdenum bi-sulphide—solved the friction issue that plagued the early hi-beat movements. Advertisements touted the Ultra-Chron’s accuracy to “within a minute a month.”

Brief History

Debuting in 1967, the Ultra-Chron was built to celebrate Longines’ centenary. With Girard-Perregaux’s Gyromatic debuting a year before and Seiko’s Lord Marvel around the same time, the Ultra-Chron was one of the earliest watches to operate at 36,000 bph at a time when the standard was just half that. When it debuted, Longines claimed in its advertisements that the Ultra-Chron was “the world’s most accurate watch,” and was guaranteed accurate to within a minute per month (or about two seconds per day).

The high-beat revolution didn’t catch on so much beyond the late ’60s and early ’70s, perhaps due to the growing ubiquity of the quartz watch, but the Ultra-Chron did remain in production well into the 1970s.

Notable Ultra-Chron Models

Reference 7970-5, was released in the late 1960s. The hi-beat Calibre 461 movement is housed in a cushion case surmounted with a Bakelite bezel in vibrant orange and black. Though rare, the Reference 7970-5 is not as rare as the manufacture’s other vintage diver—the SuperCompressor, Reference 7150-1

Features

  • Case Diameter: 41mm
  • Case Height: 12 mm
  • Case length: 42 mm
  • Lug Width: 22 mm
  • Movement: Longines 431 automatic,25j, 36.000 bph, 39 hr power reserve,
  • Case material: Stainless steel
  • Crown: Non-screw down
  • Bezel: Uni-directional indexed w/ 60
  • clicks
  • Water resistance: Not rated
  • Vintage: '60s

Links

Credit - http://scubawatch.org/longines_ultrachron.html