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Watchismo Times

THE WATCHISMO TIMES WATCH BLOG A reliquary of obscure timepieces from bygone eras as well as the cutting-edge watch designs of today.

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No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century Wristcam

No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century WristcamYes, I know, I'm off topic again, but when products are invented for the wrist, I just can't resist.

This antique Victorian (1880-1890) English bicycle horn predates most wristwatches and looks quite difficult to blow while riding the awkward 19th century Penny Farthing bicycles of the same time (shown below).

No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century Wristcam
No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century WristcamYeah, take your hand off this thing
to blow your little horn buddy!


No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century Wristcam
And since I'm feeling so un-timely today here is a modern wrist gadget by German product designer Tim Zurmoehle. Called "Watch!", a cool prototype digital wristcam.

I dig tubes...

No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century Wristcam
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History of Subminiature Spy Watch Cameras
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1955 Protana Minifon Recorder Wristwatch
History of James Bond Gadget Watches
All Gadget Watch Posts
All Multi-function Posts




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Your Very Own Atomic Clock! 1960's Patek Philippe/Hewlett Packard

Your Very Own Atomic Clock! 1960's Patek Philippe/Hewlett PackardSimilar to the portable atomic clock used for an experiment in the 1971 to prove Einstein's theory of relativity and...time travel:

"Atomic clocks are extremely accurate clocks that can measure tiny amounts of time—billionths of a second. In 1971, scientists used these clocks to test Einstein's ideas. One atomic clock was set up on the ground, while another was sent around the world on a jet traveling at 600 mph. At the start, both clocks showed exactly the same time.

What happened when the clock flown around the world returned to the spot where the other clock was? As Einstein had predicted in a general way, the clocks no longer showed the same time—the clock on the jet was behind by a few billionths of a second. Why such a small difference? Well, 600 mph is fast but still just the tiniest fraction of the speed of light. To see any significant differences in time, you'd have to be traveling many millions of miles an hour faster." (source)

In recent hunts for oddities, I happened to stumble upon this 1960's Patek Philippe & Hewlett Packard Atomic Cesium clock!



Your Very Own Atomic Clock! 1960's Patek Philippe/Hewlett Packard
Your Very Own Atomic Clock! 1960's Patek Philippe/Hewlett PackardAuction info; HP 5061A Fantastic complex scientific instrument. Actually a mobile mass spectrometer monitoring the hyperfine transition frequency of Cesium isotope 133 as atoms are hit with microwaves, and uses that output to stabilize a quartz crystal oscillator.This was the most accurate clock on earth at the time of manufacture in the late 60's. Still hard to find a more accurate clock. Frequency stability per manual is 8x10 minus 13 power. Cost was around $60,000. HP still makes a very similar model for over $120k. For those of you not around in 1967 $60,000 would buy a luxury home. Has beautiful bevel crystal glass cover for the Patek Phillipe Swiss manufactured analog clock. Makes a solid tick sound with each second. Has 1 and 5 MhZ and 100KHz outputs and 1PPS outputs. Unit is fully functional and frequency locks in 12 minutes and stays locked. Cosmetically excellent. Cannot read hour meter, but appears to have had low usage based on condition inside and out,and function. Weight 67# before packing,18 3/8" X 16 3/4" X 8 1/4". Has space for internal backup battery, not included. Includes Original A/C and D/C plugs. External D/C power can be used for backup power. Repro Operation and Service manual included.

Your Very Own Atomic Clock! 1960's Patek Philippe/Hewlett PackardIf you do get it, be sure to consider converting it to a very rare Atomic Wristwatch, like this guy-->Link


More info on Einstein's experiment-->Link and-->Link



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The Killer Zodiac Watch of the Zodiac Killer

Warning! If you haven't seen the film "Zodiac" by David Fincher (Fight Club, Se7en), this post contains spoilers for the movie.


This was a note left by the serial killer, the "Zodiac" in the late 1960s - One of many letters to the press taunting the police with ciphers and threats, terrorizing the city of San Francisco all the way through the mid-seventies. This one in particular described how he wanted people to wear his trademark crosshair logo on buttons with obvious hints of future bloodshed if he wasn't satisfied.

But my post today at TWT has less to do with his crimes and more to do with his strange wristwatch related identity.

Originally, his unsigned notes announced himself as "the killer". But soon after, he was compelled (if not convinced) to create an identity. Following letters featured a circle with crosshairs and the name "Zodiac", it was soon discovered later that the image and name combination was directly borrowed from the Swiss watch brand of the same name and same logo. Zodiac watches were the only known source where both were used. Although the crimes were never
officially solved, the prime suspect (to this day) did own a Zodiac Seawolf watch. It wasn't a very common brand to own and many other clues have linked this man to the murders. I've included the film scene below featuring the suspect interviewed by police where they discover his timepiece of choice. Forgive the quality, it was taped directly from my TV.


Press play above or go to the video-->Link

The Zodiac Suspect Arthur Leigh Allen and his Zodiac Sea Wolf

The Zodiac's 1967 Sea Wolf Diver


Movie trailer video->Link
or official Zodiac Movie Website->Link
The Zodiac Killer Timeline-->Link

Original 1960's Zodiac Sea Wolf Advertisement
(hey, is that diver killing that turtle??)

And an assortment of other vintage Zodiac
Seawolf Divers of the sixties, seventies and today;

1960s Sea Wolf Automatic

1970 Orange Diver

1970s Auto Diver

1970s SST SeaWolf


2007 Seawolfs


More styles in vintage ads-->Link

Watch photo credits;
Vintage Zodiacs
WatchesToBuy

More info about the Zodiac Killer;
Crime Library
Zodiac Movie Site
Zodiac Killer-Wikipedia
Vintage Zodiacs
Zodiac Website


Click here for vintage Seawolf auctions
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Painfully Real Cuckoo Clock - by Michael Sans

Painfully Real Cuckoo Clock - by Michael SansThe traditional Black Forrest Cuckoo Clock is creatively crucified by German artist and product designer, Michael Sans. This clock, simply titled "Cuckoo Clock", with materials consisting of; digital clock, metal housing, chromed nails and chain, cuckoo (died of natural causes in 1958). One of a kind-Not for sale.

Painfully Real Cuckoo Clock - by Michael SansDigital LED clock hung around the Cuckoo's head

Painfully Real Cuckoo Clock - by Michael Sans
Michael Sans Website-->Link


Related Posts on Watchismo;
All Clock features-->Link
All Artist features-->Link



Antique Black Forrest Cuckoo Clock Auctions
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Murano Watch Waste - Luxury Sink Drain Plug Clock

Murano Watch Waste - Luxury Sink Drain Plug Clock
Ordinarily, I'd come up with a lot to say about this drain plug watch/clock from Italy's Murano House but really, it would just be a lot of my time down the drain...


MuranoHouse Watch Waste-->Link

via Trendir


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Newsflash! Time May Not Exist!

Not to mention the question of which way it goes...

by Tim Folger

"No one keeps track of time better than Ferenc Krausz. In his lab at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, he has clocked the shortest time intervals ever observed. Krausz uses ultraviolet laser pulses to track the absurdly brief quantum leaps of electrons within atoms. The events he probes last for about 100 attoseconds, or 100 quintillionths of a second. For a little perspective, 100 attoseconds is to one second as a second is to 300 million years.


Newsflash! Time May Not Exist!So, is this guy wasting his Plancks?

But even Krausz works far from the frontier of time. There is a temporal realm called the Planck scale, where even attoseconds drag by like eons. It marks the edge of known physics, a region where distances and intervals are so short that the very concepts of time and space start to break down. Planck time—the smallest unit of time that has any physical meaning—is 10-43 second, less than a trillionth of a trillionth of an attosecond. Beyond that? Tempus incognito. At least for now.

Efforts to understand time below the Planck scale have led to an exceedingly strange juncture in physics. The problem, in brief, is that time may not exist at the most fundamental level of physical reality. If so, then what is time? And why is it so obviously and tyrannically omnipresent in our own experience? “The meaning of time has become terribly problematic in contemporary physics,” says Simon Saunders, a philosopher of physics at the University of Oxford. “The situation is so uncomfortable that by far the best thing to do is declare oneself an agnostic.”

Maybe this means we'll see an F.P. Journe Attoseconde or Jaeger LeCoultre Planckograph someday? That is, if days even exist...

via Horomundi
Full Article at DISCOVERY-->Link



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Clockwiser - Vinta Tilt & Homemade Kinetic Clocks

Japanese design company Vinta has created a wooden table clock that measures the time by rotating on its perfectly round bottom, tilting to one of two models that rotate once every hour or every minute.

Their description;
"We wanted to express the idea of "feeling the time", not "measuring the time". It can be shown from revolving slowly on its own axis once every hour with an ambiguous change in its inclination. And we used the preciseness of a Japanese craftman technique to make this delicate shape to revolve smoothly."

Product Link
Video Link

via Make




The website Instructables offers this step by step guide to making a cool kinetic op-art wall clock-->Link




Source via Make

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No Time For a 19th Century English Bicycle Wrist-Horn & 21st Century WristcamYour Very Own Atomic Clock! 1960's Patek Philippe/Hewlett PackardThe Killer Zodiac Watch of the Zodiac KillerPainfully Real Cuckoo Clock - by Michael SansMurano Watch Waste - Luxury Sink Drain Plug ClockNewsflash! Time May Not Exist!Clockwiser - Vinta Tilt & Homemade Kinetic Clocks

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