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Show us your military watch


markr

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  • 3 months later...
Posted (edited)

The incomplete Vertex DD is a new project to sort out.  The Seiko gen 1, is my favourite watch to wear and is my daily.  

 

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Screenshot_20240428-073126_eBay.jpg

 

Screenshot_20230721-163310_Samsung Internet.jpg

Edited by B1N9S
Dont like the grubby fingers in the pic.
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  • 2 months later...

This one is all SS, has 24 hour numbers, 100m WR, great lume and is fairly large size and easy to read with a hack (as it is quartz). Says military on the dial...love the date function never seen one before with 2 wheels that turn independantly for each digit...but make the date large without a bubble, which is nice. Has a mineral crystal as well.20240714_1144222.thumb.jpg.58ffcb4a7cd5892056f089f1bc6a09da.jpgDSCN59393.thumb.JPG.a04556e7511a8b73c5c51c0c7846b4e8.JPG

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32 minutes ago, tIB said:

Surprising lack of G10's in this one, so here's some!IMG_20240620_0743552.thumb.jpg.7eec3577560a4742c4e29e6fa23c9905.jpg

(Eagle eyed types might spot some anomalies there...)

The one far left is the odd one out for me. Swiss rather than Swiss made, this would indicate a Swiss movement but built outside Switzerland. Same watch has less prominent logo and numeral printing.  What do the casebacks look like?

 

you would think I would be better at this as I wore one daily for about 5 years 😆

 

Tom

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6 minutes ago, tomh207 said:

The one far left is the odd one out for me. Swiss rather than Swiss made, this would indicate a Swiss movement but built outside Switzerland. Same watch has less prominent logo and numeral printing.  What do the casebacks look like?

 

you would think I would be better at this as I wore one daily for about 5 years 😆

 

Tom

Yep Tom,  i spotted that first off then i noticed the lugs on the middle one are thinner, i cant say what tells us. 

The sides of the middle case look less swept. Maybe thats just a difference in the manufacturing period ?

13 minutes ago, tomh207 said:

you would think I would be better at this as I wore one daily for about 5 years 😆

 

Do you still have it Tom ? I had the chance of a Cabot 6 months ago at Doncaster fair, i was sorely tempted, price was around £200.

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13 minutes ago, Neverenoughwatches said:

Yep Tom,  i spotted that first off then i noticed the lugs on the middle one are thinner, i cant say what tells us. 

We need to see the casebacks, they should have a nsn as a part number with the first 6 digits would be 6645-99. 6645 is the grouping for timekeeping equipment, 99 is the designator for UK. Most CWC/MWC G10’s kicking around were never issued but bought by squaddies outside of the G1098 stores system so wouldn’t have the nsn. In addition they were also procured by the UK establishment for police services etc. these also wouldn’t have the nsn. Watches were not on general issue, only issued to corporal and above who were in charge of a section, unit etc. 

 

Tom

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4 minutes ago, tomh207 said:

We need to see the casebacks, they should have a nsn as a part number with the first 6 digits would be 6645-99. 6645 is the grouping for timekeeping equipment, 99 is the designator for UK. Most CWC/MWC G10’s kicking around were never issued but bought by squaddies outside of the G1098 stores system so wouldn’t have the nsn. In addition they were also procured by the UK establishment for police services etc. these also wouldn’t have the nsn. Watches were not on general issue, only issued to corporal and above who were in charge of a section, unit etc. 

 

Tom

Cracking info Tom from an ex. 

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IMG_20240620_074245_HDR.thumb.jpg.3297ee86e4e2740fefe6f47ab7716382.jpgIMG_20240620_074437.thumb.jpg.c021c27f6e02e08437252e925684855c.jpgSo yes, some good eyes here - there's one completely genuine '89 in that trio, most easily identified by the lugs - the two with pins rather than fixed bars and ever so slightly larger lugs are the giveaway front side. They also lack a tension ring. 

 

Dials are all original - the Swiss one is from an earlier Fatboy. Cases on the other two are the Rdunae ones which are decent if you ever find yourself with a dial and a mate who wants a watch like yours like I did! 

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@Neverenoughwatches unfortunately Rich I had to hand it back to stores when I left the unit. Watches for issue were always in short supply, there are fewer genuine issued watches out there than you would think. They are decent quality robust watches which do what they say on the tin, a real grab and do anything watch. I bought a MWC version for myself a few years ago, the one I posted above, a limited civvy edition with T25 tritium tubes. I also had a spec ops specified one which is a kinetic hybrid  With T100 tritium tubes. I gave it to my son in law who promptly gave it to my daughter when they split up. I don’t think it was fancy enough for him as instead he kept the somewhat trashy skeletonised watch I gave him. I suspect that he didn’t realise that the real military spec watch cost more than 4 times what the bling did. 😂 These were both rated for 10 years battery life, my newest one is a 2018 batch so will see if that holds up.

a piece of trivia on these, although issued with a grey NATO strap very few of us wore them on that, certainly in the units I served with. Generally we used a leather Bundt style strap with a pop button cover for the watch head. This was for protection mainly as you were fiscally responsible for any damage to anything you signed out of the G1098 on a form G1033. IIRC for a watch to be issued to you the G1033 had to be countersigned by the officer commanding your unit.

 

Tom

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2 hours ago, tomh207 said:

This was for protection mainly as you were fiscally responsible for any damage to anything you signed out of the G1098 on a form G1033.

Crikey! That's cold...

...not to change the subject but I'll post this one. The old boy this one belonged to must have forgot to sign his form 😅...

IMG_1389.thumb.jpeg.0f9efcaefa3d68ffbab6c236d4db9d46.jpeg

 

IMG_1540.thumb.jpeg.24f8902ba03229ddb7925e3c3c26f249.jpeg

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49 minutes ago, rehajm said:

Crikey! That's cold...

...not to change the subject but I'll post this one. The old boy this one belonged to must have forgot to sign his form 😅...

IMG_1389.thumb.jpeg.0f9efcaefa3d68ffbab6c236d4db9d46.jpeg

 

IMG_1540.thumb.jpeg.24f8902ba03229ddb7925e3c3c26f249.jpeg

Lovely that!

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IMG_1556.thumb.JPG.1916cb78a208adf008eacead0d3d2b4f.JPGHere's mine. Officer's watch from the wrong side of WWII. Back is scratched all to hell to get rid of the D#. There are little tangs around the crystal from the tip of a bayonet resulting from a battlefield repair attempting to keep the crystal from falling out (this according to the watchmaker I took it to to have it serviced shortly after I got it). I got it off eBay out of the Ukraine when I was in college nearly 20 years ago for $35. That sourcing location suggests it was possibly traded for cigarettes or something in a POW camp, or picked off a corpse on the eastern front. I had no idea what it was beyond a cool looking hand wound watch. It's negatively water resistant due to the crystal, so I don't wear it anymore. Insane little bit of history to have on ones' wrist.

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  • 1 month later...

Here's my military collection from the bottom of the world in NZ.

The two that interest me the most are both not military issue but rather private purchases that saw service in either WW1 or WW2: the old timer from 1916 sporting  the "shrapnel guard" and the little Revue Sport . The 1916 watch was worn through WW1 and the owner was wounded four times. The little Revue Sports was worn by an engineer in a NZ armored regiment in WW2.

The Tissot is an interesting beast - it has a heavily polished case-back with a broad arrow and a "PAF" marking. I've had various explanations offered for the PAF engraving but none that I can reliably verify.

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

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