Listen carefully to this little movie I did at Baselworld and guess why this minute repeater is special: This message has been edited by foversta on 2011-04-01 15:42:03...
Listen carefully and you will understand that there is something unusual if you compare it with the "classic" minute repeaters. BTW, I shot the movie with my little camera: the sound of this watch is excellent but the recording poor. Fx
The individual sounds of the hammer striking the gong or what ever its called sounds very nice, but id prefer it to be a little bit faster I personally wouldnt get this one, i dont really like the design, but I do respect the watch thanks for sharing this...
This Credor is a gorgeous piece of art. The piece is very sculptural in a unique way. I so very much want to hear one live and in person! It's fun to watch the crown turn once you engage the repeater. Cheers, Daos
The hammers play 4 times "the quarters"... it's the proof that the Credor Minute Repeater is a Decimal Repeater. Fx This message has been edited by foversta on 2011-04-01 22:59:43
At least this trick can be used by Seiko to give a visual indicator that the hammers, located on the back, are playing. I don't remember if the crown was being wound while pressing the sonnerie sliding pusher. It was actually the person from Seiko who ope...
can anyone post links to old/new decimal repeaters that can be seen on the internet? who invented this complication? any history on this subject? i am really interested. thank you.
www.watchprosite.com http://www.network54.com/Forum/125468/thread/1118739602/1119394280/Sound+file+of+a+relatively+rare+AP ... There was this one post where Thomas posted a bunch of minute repeater audio files for all of us to enjoy, but I can't find that...