The lack of Incabloc is particularly visible on the second shot as you told us. Strange decision even thought. But, finally, an interesting timepiece for watch collectors ;-)
IWC had a history of providing watches to specific army requirements to various countries of this world. The Mark XI is one of those famous models in this category. And we normally know them for their characteristic black dial with specific army layout an...
The lack of Incabloc is particularly visible on the second shot as you told us. Strange decision even thought. But, finally, an interesting timepiece for watch collectors ;-) Best wishes Alkiro
...closed my forum account there after many years. The vintage section there is unfortunately dominated by "I inherited this watch, can you tell me if it is authentic" type of posts. More lively here, more content here. Cheers, HSTE
I was active on it for a couple years and found the discussions interesting, especially with Pilots and vintage Portugeisers. And very, very passionate-nasty at times! I guess it's changed.
Perhaps it was made by IWC as homage to the early one you present here. I cannot remember except that it was thought to be very rare by some IWC fans I knew, and a German guy on holiday here in the US talked me into selling it to him. Do you know any hist...
named for the jewelry store which commissioned it; someone please correct me if I'm wrong. I don't know if its commissioning had anything to do with the white-dialed Mark XI pictured and described here.
It appears my watch was not one of the 50 Gadebusch watches. They had engraving on the back. Mine was part of another batch made around the same time, and reputed to be 200, 600, or unlimited numbers (no agreement on the quantity). Although it was suppose...
. . . at the same time and for the same reason . . . [image from seller's website] . . . as the '56 RAF Omegas. The script lay-out is intriguing; can't recall seeing 'International' over 'Watch Co' before. Art ...