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Re: Tank 9? [message #3884 is a reply to message #3883] |
Fri, 20 June 2014 19:59   |
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afire
Messages: 1355 Registered: May 2013 Location: Wisconsin
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Gruen Authority |
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Very nice, and that was an absolute steal.
Jenneke wrote on Fri, 20 June 2014 14:28When looking in the master book I think this one is a Tank 9. But with the hands of Tank 1 and the dial of Tank 13. What would you say?
I would say that the dial and hands don't have any bearing on an ID. If the case matches Tank 9, then I'd say it's a Tank 9. That said, I'm guessing that the hands might not be original. I would expect it to have luminous hands to match the luminous dial.
Jenneke wrote on Fri, 20 June 2014 14:28And the seller stated is as Green gold. How can you see it is green gold? I would call it pale greenish yellow. If this one is green I might have more green gruen's... hmmm.
"Pale greenish yellow" pretty much sums up "green" gold. And you probably do have other green Gruens if you have any from the 1920s. Just looking in the Master Book, it appears that green and white were just about the only colors used for that decade. Right at the end of the '20s and beginning of the '30s, you see yellow (or "coin") gold creeping back in, and by the mid '30s, everything is yellow or rose, no green, and almost no white. If ever in doubt, set a suspected green case next to a yellow gold case from the mid '30s or later and the difference should be evident.
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Re: Tank 9? [message #14813 is a reply to message #14812] |
Sat, 01 May 2021 02:11  |
Gary
Messages: 2208 Registered: May 2013 Location: Seattle
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Gruen Authority Cheerleader |
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Would stand to be, from the Wiki
Clocks, watches, and instruments dating from the first half of the 20th century, often in military applications, may have been painted with radioactive luminous paint. They are usually no longer luminous; however, this is not due to radioactive decay of the radium (which has a half-life of 1600 years) but to the fluorescence of the zinc sulfide fluorescent medium being worn out by the radiation from the radium.[46] The appearance of an often thick layer of green or yellowish brown paint in devices from this period suggests a radioactive hazard. The radiation dose from an intact device is relatively low and usually not an acute risk; but the paint is dangerous if released and inhaled or ingested.
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