Risto
路There's not much love for vintage Citizens here 馃榾
Anyway, I have had some vintage Citizens before (bullheads, Record Master, Chronomaster, Diamond Flake) and recently bought a Chronometer model reference nr CR1507051.
Why I like it: design, 37mm case, manual wind good movement, overall quality.
I chose the stainless steel one, which is rarer than the gold (and filled) models.
Anyone here has one?
Some background info:
https://vintagecitizenwatches.com/2015/06/14/citizen-chronometer/
Bogdan created that website and has gathered a great number of models he owned, so I am quoting him regarding this Chronometer model.
"Some say it was born as an answer to Seiko鈥檚 Grand Seiko line. Others say it was made to demonstrate a point, that Citizen is capable of great things, so they constructed this awesome timepiece, the best one! And it stands its grounds up to this day as both vintage and modern, classy and elegant, and powerful watch no matter the reason it was made in the first place. This model was launched in November 1962 and was produced for about 4-5 years. Being a Chronometer means it has a very high accuracy level, ranging from -1 to +10 s / day. The very large balance wheel and the fine adjustments along with the carefully designed and constructed movement proved it to be the best movement Citizen had at the time. The finishing is great too and even today I find it very pleasing to look at. It is a hand-winding movement (soon after this most of the watches were automatics) and runs at 18.000 vph while having a nice power reserve of about 53 hours. On the Citizen website can be found a certificate (the picture below) that proves the quality of the watch, also some solid gold models sell for 15+ k USD."
Also, according to this Hairspiring article:
https://hairspring.com/finds/cr1507051-citizen-chronometer/
"It is said that the production and assembly of the Chronometer was entirely separate within Citizen, where one skilled watchmaker saw one piece鈥檚 construction through from beginning to end over the course of one day. This was the old way, from the Shokosha Watch Research Institute before it became Citizen. The line was not commercially a huge success, the process could not be scaled, and the line folded five years later."
So, some pics I took of mine and some I borrowed from Bogdan.
Anyway, I have had some vintage Citizens before (bullheads, Record Master, Chronomaster, Diamond Flake) and recently bought a Chronometer model reference nr CR1507051.
Why I like it: design, 37mm case, manual wind good movement, overall quality.
I chose the stainless steel one, which is rarer than the gold (and filled) models.
Anyone here has one?
Some background info:
https://vintagecitizenwatches.com/2015/06/14/citizen-chronometer/
Bogdan created that website and has gathered a great number of models he owned, so I am quoting him regarding this Chronometer model.
"Some say it was born as an answer to Seiko鈥檚 Grand Seiko line. Others say it was made to demonstrate a point, that Citizen is capable of great things, so they constructed this awesome timepiece, the best one! And it stands its grounds up to this day as both vintage and modern, classy and elegant, and powerful watch no matter the reason it was made in the first place. This model was launched in November 1962 and was produced for about 4-5 years. Being a Chronometer means it has a very high accuracy level, ranging from -1 to +10 s / day. The very large balance wheel and the fine adjustments along with the carefully designed and constructed movement proved it to be the best movement Citizen had at the time. The finishing is great too and even today I find it very pleasing to look at. It is a hand-winding movement (soon after this most of the watches were automatics) and runs at 18.000 vph while having a nice power reserve of about 53 hours. On the Citizen website can be found a certificate (the picture below) that proves the quality of the watch, also some solid gold models sell for 15+ k USD."
Also, according to this Hairspiring article:
https://hairspring.com/finds/cr1507051-citizen-chronometer/
"It is said that the production and assembly of the Chronometer was entirely separate within Citizen, where one skilled watchmaker saw one piece鈥檚 construction through from beginning to end over the course of one day. This was the old way, from the Shokosha Watch Research Institute before it became Citizen. The line was not commercially a huge success, the process could not be scaled, and the line folded five years later."
So, some pics I took of mine and some I borrowed from Bogdan.