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Help with identification of Omega caliber needed ...

  1. bigbug1964 Apr 19, 2019

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    Dear all,

    As I'm a Longines collector and not that familiar with Omega calibers, can anybody here help me with the identification of this enemble?

    Kaliber: Omega 1350?
    Serial Number: 1'959'681 (dating to the beginning of 1900 sounds strange to me)

    Guess, it has been used for somehow "timekeeping" issues (as Longines and Omega once had a joint history of timing in sports events)

    LO_OM_19-04-19_0001.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0002.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0003.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0004.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0005.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0006.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0007.jpg
    LO_OM_19-04-19_0008.jpg

    Seems to be similar to that on:

    LO_OM_10-07-Rikard.jpg

    Many thanks in advance
    bb1964
     
    Caliber561, CaptainWinsor and Als 27 like this.
  2. CaptainWinsor Apr 19, 2019

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    Is it a chess timer?
     
  3. bigbug1964 Apr 19, 2019

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    Don't think so.

    Btw: This is an answer, but not on my question ::facepalm1::

    bb64
     
  4. gatorcpa ΩF InvestiGator Staff Member Apr 19, 2019

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  5. bigbug1964 Apr 20, 2019

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    Sorry,

    I think your assumption is not quite correct, as there defitely has been a cooperation before 1983:

    1972: Swiss Timing (Société Suisse de Chronométrage SA) was founded in Biel on July 3. The signatories to the foundation act were FH (Fédération de l'industrie horlogère suisse), OMEGA and Longines.

    1976: Swiss Timing was responsible for the timekeeping of both the summer and winter editions of the Olympic Games in Montreal and Innsbruck respectively. The partner brands were OMEGA, Longines and Heuer.

    1983: Nicolas G. Hayek masterminded the merger of ASUAG and SSIH that resulted in the Société de Microélectronique et d’Horlogerie SA (SMH), the holding company that would later be renamed Swatch Group. Mr. Hayek affirmed his commitment to Swiss Timing, ensuring that it would not be dissolved.

    1988: OMEGA Sports Timing workshops relocated to St. Imier, joining the timekeeping teams under the same roof for the first time ever.
    The Longines R&D, industrial, and marketing departments were integrated into OMEGA Electronics.

    Summary:

    Source: https://www.swisstiming.com/company/history/

    The history of Swiss Timing

    Although Swiss Timing as an independent entity was officially founded in July of 1972, its roots can be traced back more than a century to the earliest sports timekeeping activities of its sister brands, Omega and Longines.

    Omega was on hand as official timekeeper at the Gordon Bennett Cup balloon race in 1904, the first documented occasion of the brand lending its services to sport. Omega’s services came of age in Los Angeles in 1932 when, for the first time, a single company was responsible for the timekeeping of every event at an edition of the Olympic Games.

    That partnership with the International Olympic Committee was an important one in the development of modern sports timekeeping and it remains a cornerstone in the Swiss Timing story. Working closely with its sister brands, it has delivered state-of-the-industry timekeeping and data handling solutions to the world’s highest-profile sporting event.

    Longines had also served as Official Timekeeper at the Olympic Games either on its own or with Omega. The brand from St. Imier also has a long history in its support of alpine skiing, motor racing and, famously, equestrian sports.

    Encouraged by the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry (FH), sports timing specialists from the two brands joined forces and signed the founding documents of Swiss Timing in July of 1972 in Biel. But it wasn’t until 1988 that the Longines Timing team merged with Omega Sports Timing under one roof at Swiss Timing.

    In the years since, other Swatch Group brands - including Swatch, Tissot, Blancpain, Certina, and Rado - have also commissioned Swiss Timing to work on their behalf at the sporting events most associated with the brands.


    Technological evolution . . . and revolution

    It is remarkable to consider the evolution of timekeeping technology and services since Omega first assumed timekeeping responsibilities in 1932. The 30 split-second chronographs used in Los Angeles have been replaced by 450 tons of state-of-the-art equipment, 175 kilometres of cable and optical fibre, and 70 display boards at the London 2012 Olympic Games. No fewer than 450 technicians, supported by some 800 trained volunteers, were dispersed among the 31 Olympic venues in the capital and its surroundings.

    A commitment to sport

    Working closely with the governing federations of more than 100 sports, Swiss Timing engineers, sport managers, and specialists are committed to creating timekeeping and data handling technologies and processes that are equal to the ever-changing requirements of a broad range of events and sports.

    In the company’s history, these have included such breakthroughs as photoelectric cells, Scan’O’Vision photofinish cameras, touch pads in swimming pools, and starting blocks with false start sensors. And every year, new technologies are introduced to serve the sporting federations and event organizers, to record the incredible performances of the world’s best athletes, and to inform spectators and fans around the world.


    An admirable contradiction of the heart and mind

    The world is passionate about sport and as Nick Hayek, President of the Group Management Board of Swatch Group, has said, “Sport is a blend of pure emotion and absolute irrationality mixed with moments of absolute precision, complete objectivity, and black and white results – an admirable contradiction of the heart and mind. Swiss Timing has been an exceptional ambassador.”

    The company has always been proud of that role.


    bb1964
     
  6. bigbug1964 Apr 20, 2019

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    And again thanks for your support, which makes it to a Caliber 1350 Split and helps dating it to somehow 1967.

    Contrary to your assumption this is the existing hardware proof (there is a second one, which I have sold years ago to a befriended collector in Sweden. He also owns that Omega version, shown in my pictures) that Omega and Longines must have had joint activities in the field of sports timekeeping before 1983.

    See also my indications before ...

    bb1964