DManzaluni
·I just came across this online somewhere and to me, it doesnt sound possible:
The 9.40 was an advanced unit intended for a high spending market. New collectors are surprised to hear that it shares every one of its components with another Longines movement, the 10.40, also released in 1926. The only difference between the two is an extra ligne in the diameter ( the ligne is the unit of movement width measurement traditionally used in the Swiss watch industry) of the latter and otherwise, these units are identical. The running speed of the 9.40 was 18000 half beats per hour, which at the time, long before the fast beat era of the 1960s, was considered a rapid pace.
I suppose it is possible that just the base plate was larger and everything else was the same?
I have a 10.40 with a broken seconds hand pinion and wonder if I should now widen my search?
The 9.40 was an advanced unit intended for a high spending market. New collectors are surprised to hear that it shares every one of its components with another Longines movement, the 10.40, also released in 1926. The only difference between the two is an extra ligne in the diameter ( the ligne is the unit of movement width measurement traditionally used in the Swiss watch industry) of the latter and otherwise, these units are identical. The running speed of the 9.40 was 18000 half beats per hour, which at the time, long before the fast beat era of the 1960s, was considered a rapid pace.
I suppose it is possible that just the base plate was larger and everything else was the same?
I have a 10.40 with a broken seconds hand pinion and wonder if I should now widen my search?