Chapter 5 QUARTZ and SPRING DRIVES

 

I think for these guys we can start with the specifications table. Following the same format as the mechanical watches, but with modifications as necessary, here's what I found:
                 

 Mechanical    SBGA011   GCLL997  SBGT027  SBGX039  SBGF009 
Winding AutomaticAutomatic QuartzQuartz Quartz
Movement 9S56-0AA05R77-0AA4 9F83-0AD09F61-0AA0 8J55-0010
Power Rsrv 72 hr72 hr 5 yr3 yr 3 yr
Timekeeping-1, +1
sec/day
-1, +1
sec/day
-5, +5
sec/year
-10, +10
sec/year
-10, +10
sec/year
Diameter 41.041.3 37.238.6 36.0
Thickness 12.5 13.610.611.0 9.3
Crown Dia. 5.9 locking5.74.7 locking5.2 locking 4.2
Material
& Weight
Titanium 70Steel 85Steel 60Steel 135Steel 95
Hand Color1 blue
3 silver
3 blue
1 silver
1 blue
2 silver
3 silver1 silver
2 silver/blk
Hand Shapesword
beveled
curved
pitched
dauphine
pitched
dauphine
pitched
modern
pitched
Crystalsapphire
domed
sapphire
dual curve
sapphire
dual curve
sapphire
dual curve
sapphire
flat
Date / DayDate 3NoDay Date at 3NoNo
Other DialPower 7
Snowflake
Moon 4
Power 7
Tuxedo stripes
Star at 6
Cross grid
Lion & GS
Sparkles
Indiciesapplied
triangular at
6,9,12
applied at
3,6,9,12
applied

6,9,12
applied
double at
3,6,9,12
applied
numerals at
3,6,9,12
Minute
Marks
lines2 types of dots
chrome & blue
applied all
minutes
applied all
minutes
lines
Casebacksapphire
screw-in
sapphire
screw in
solid with
gold Lion
solidsolid
GS Lionetched in
sapphire
no Lionfaces crownfaces
crown
no Lion
Lugsdrilledscrewsdrilleddrilledsolid
Buckleflip lockdeployanttangflip lockflip lock
Bracelet 20 titanium
multi-segment
20 strap
8 holes
18 strap
8 holes
20 steel
multi-segment
18 steel
multi-segment


QUARTZ MOVEMENTS
Much of the following copy comes from the Grand Seiko site describing their quartz models. I'm including because QUARTZ and PuristS are not often combined in the same post, much less the same sentence. I get some flak from people for having included a few quartz watches in my collection - the GS models, another Japanese model called The Citizen Chronomaster, the Breitling Aerospace, and the Rolex OysterQuartz.

These are not your normal beater $9.95 digital quartz watches.

The Caliber 9F models look like a mechanical watch, because the hands extend right to the very edge of the dial - not possible in a normal quartz watch. Caliber 9F has greater torque and uses longer hands, thanks to a twin pulse motor that delivers more power with a three year battery life.

A quartz oscillator vibrates 32,768 times a second, but this frequency may be affected by environmental and temperature changes. Stable oscillation is the key to the accuracy of a quartz watch. Each Grand Seiko quartz crystal is chosen and tested individually for a three month long aging process.

To ensure the minimum accuracy of one second a day required by the Grand Seiko standard, Quartz caliber 9F automatically detects temperature variations 540 times a day (every 160 seconds) and compensates for these variations so as to maintain accuracy.

In a mechanical watch, accuracy can be manually adjusted, but no normal quartz watch is adjustable. The Grand Seiko quartz caliber 9F has a “Pacing Switch” for fine adjustment. This allows high accuracy to be maintained even if the watch is worn in extreme temperatures.

Caliber 9F is not just extremely accurate, it presents time extremely accurately. The second hand in Caliber 9F stops exactly on the second markers, without any vibration. This quartz movement uses a device from the world of high-grade mechanical watchmaking to ensure precise motion - the addition of a regulatory wheel automatically adjusts the backlash between the gears.

The hour hand moves 24 times a day, the minute hand moves 1,440 times a day and the second hand 86,400 times. To ensure that the absolute precision of each of these 87,864 movements is not compromised by any interference of one hand by another, each axis of the three hands is separate and independent, not driving off another.

The rotor and gear train of caliber 9F are tightly sealed in a self-contained cabin. This guarantees the long lasting quality and precision of the movement by preventing dust entering when the case back is opened for battery replacement. This 'super sealed' cabin mechanism also increases the life of the lubricating oils that ensure the smooth operation of the gear train. Theoretically, additional lubrication is not needed for fifty years.

In most watches, the date change is gradual and takes several hours to complete. This imprecision was not good enough for the Caliber 9F design team, so they added a spring lever mechanism which causes the date to change instantaneously in just 1 / 2,000th of a second!

SPRING DRIVE
This model movement is entirely mechanical down to the escapement, which has been replaced by a "glide wheel", a tiny generator, and a balancing circuit that gently slows the glide wheel (should it go too fast) by magnetic repulsion. There are no batteries, capacitors or other user-replaceable parts in this circuits. Its merits can be debated elsewhere - all I can say is the movement is lovely and the smoothly gliding second hand is unlike either a conventional second hand or the tic-toc of a few mechanical "dead seconds" movements or the quartz brigade.

I've had about 10 Spring Drives but kept only these.

Still more to come in another chapter!
This message has been edited by cazalea on 2014-10-19 06:07:07

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