Difference between revisions of "Croton Nivada Grenchen Chronomaster"

From Chronopedia
Line 3: Line 3:
 
==Croton Nivada Grenchen Chonomaster==
 
==Croton Nivada Grenchen Chonomaster==
  
Nivada was presented hit a legal hurdle thanks to Movado when trying to sell in the USA, who felt that their names were too similar and would confuse consumers. A judge ruled that adding ‘Grenchen’ to the title would suffice, and so watches sold thereafter are labeled as such. In 1940 Croton was formed to distribute Nivada watches to US retailers, and subsequent watches could be found bearing the name ‘Croton’, or ‘Croton Nivada’ or even ‘Croton Nivada Grenchen’. By the ‘60s, Nivada had hit their stride with watches like the Chronomaster, Aviator, Sea Diver. The unique design and functionality of these watches struck a high note with consumers, and Nivada saw their exports go from 52,000 in 1964 to 173,000 in 1969 as a result.
+
Nivada hit a legal hurdle when trying to sell in the USA, thanks to Movado who felt that their names were too similar and would confuse consumers. A judge ruled that adding ‘Grenchen’ to the title would suffice, and so watches sold thereafter are labeled as such.  
 +
 
 +
In 1940 Croton was formed to distribute Nivada watches to US retailers, and subsequent watches could be found bearing the name ‘Croton’, or ‘Croton Nivada’ or even ‘Croton Nivada Grenchen’. By the ‘60s, Nivada had hit their stride with watches like the Chronomaster, Aviator, Sea Diver. The unique design and functionality of these watches struck a high note with consumers, and Nivada saw their exports go from 52,000 in 1964 to 173,000 in 1969 as a result.
  
 
The CASD is a classic 1960s diver going through several iterations like the [[Omega Speedmaster]], with tritium, radium, broad arrow and baton hands, brown chocolate aged dials etc etc. They now have a big following, greatly enhanced by the recent Chronomaster Only book in 2018.
 
The CASD is a classic 1960s diver going through several iterations like the [[Omega Speedmaster]], with tritium, radium, broad arrow and baton hands, brown chocolate aged dials etc etc. They now have a big following, greatly enhanced by the recent Chronomaster Only book in 2018.
  
Model One
+
==Model One - straight lugs 1961 to circa 1971==
 +
This is the version covered in the Chronomaster Only book and most popular with collectors. There are 5 main versions depending on the movement:
 +
===Venus 210===
 +
===Valjoux 92===
 +
===Valjoux 23===
 +
===Landeron 248===
 +
===Valjoux 7733===
 +
 
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 21:14, 5 January 2021

Croton casd.png

Croton Nivada Grenchen Chonomaster

Nivada hit a legal hurdle when trying to sell in the USA, thanks to Movado who felt that their names were too similar and would confuse consumers. A judge ruled that adding ‘Grenchen’ to the title would suffice, and so watches sold thereafter are labeled as such.

In 1940 Croton was formed to distribute Nivada watches to US retailers, and subsequent watches could be found bearing the name ‘Croton’, or ‘Croton Nivada’ or even ‘Croton Nivada Grenchen’. By the ‘60s, Nivada had hit their stride with watches like the Chronomaster, Aviator, Sea Diver. The unique design and functionality of these watches struck a high note with consumers, and Nivada saw their exports go from 52,000 in 1964 to 173,000 in 1969 as a result.

The CASD is a classic 1960s diver going through several iterations like the Omega Speedmaster, with tritium, radium, broad arrow and baton hands, brown chocolate aged dials etc etc. They now have a big following, greatly enhanced by the recent Chronomaster Only book in 2018.

Model One - straight lugs 1961 to circa 1971

This is the version covered in the Chronomaster Only book and most popular with collectors. There are 5 main versions depending on the movement:

Venus 210

Valjoux 92

Valjoux 23

Landeron 248

Valjoux 7733

Links