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Re: Need some help with a Gruen pocket watch [message #5466 is a reply to message #5465] |
Tue, 21 April 2015 06:26 |
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Barney Green
Messages: 1747 Registered: February 2014 Location: Wolfsburg, Germany
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Gruen Authority |
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You are definitely not far away with your 1910 to 1912 guess on this very nice Gruen. I am definitely not the expert in Gruen's pocket watchesbut to me this looks like a V3 caliber movement from the 1910s. Can't see the escapement on the photo clear enough if it has the typical moustache form. Solid 14k in house made case, the '51' is just the ending of the case serial number so that the parts can not be mismatched during assembly or at a watchmaker's desk. I'd date it around 1915...
Gruen, Gruen, Gruen ist alles was ich habe... Gruen, Gruen, Gruen is all I have...(German folklore song)
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Re: Need some help with a Gruen pocket watch [message #5467 is a reply to message #5466] |
Tue, 21 April 2015 11:58 |
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Thojil
Messages: 650 Registered: May 2013 Location: Concorès, France
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Gruen Master |
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Very nice watch you have there. Gruen introduced the 1st generation Veri-Thin movements already in 1903. These were replaced by the "V" caliber series in 1910 and were produced until about 1938. Yours has a Gruen produced solid gold case and was supplied as a complete watch to the customer. At the time this was still a novelty as most manufacturers just supplied the movement and the customer would chose a generic case to put it in at the jeweler.
The "V" series were available in various quality levels.
- VE-21j "Extra Precision"
- V1-21j; V2-19j; V3-17j "Precision"
- V1.5-21j; V2.5-19j; V4-17j; V5-15j "Regular Adjusted"
Your movement is a V4 17j, which was Gruen's best selling movement in the range. It is not a V3 as these movements had a different ratchet & click spring design and also had "Precision Chronometer Balance" engraved on the barrel bridge. The following description of the V4 is taken from the 1916 Gruen Blue Book
"Center jewel in red gold setting, adjusted to five positions, temperatures and isochronism. It has every known improvement, such as double roller, visible steel escapement, patent regulator, time adjusting screws, brequet hairspring, compensating balance, safety sliding click, finest hardened materials"
About dating your movement I would add 2-3 years, so 1917-1918. In my serial number database I have a few serial numbers between 470k and 480k that have cases with date inscriptions of 1917/1918. The same time you have to be careful dating this way as it is not very reliable. So Barney could still be right...
For my information, can you confirm if the inscription on inner dust cover says "Verithin Model 14K" over the serial number?
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Re: Need some help with a Gruen pocket watch [message #5469 is a reply to message #5467] |
Tue, 21 April 2015 12:28 |
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Barney Green
Messages: 1747 Registered: February 2014 Location: Wolfsburg, Germany
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Gruen Authority |
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Very good input from Thojil. This was my first attempt dating a pocket watch, so I was slightly off in almost all regards. Did not have a picture of a V4 at work nor did I have my master book with me. Apologies for not being exact...
Gruen, Gruen, Gruen ist alles was ich habe... Gruen, Gruen, Gruen is all I have...(German folklore song)
[Updated on: Tue, 21 April 2015 19:33] Report message to a moderator
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Re: Need some help with a Gruen pocket watch [message #5471 is a reply to message #5470] |
Tue, 21 April 2015 17:05 |
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Thojil
Messages: 650 Registered: May 2013 Location: Concorès, France
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Gruen Master |
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afire wrote on Tue, 21 April 2015 17:32Looking at the 1918 catalog, I can't make a positive ID. There are two candidates. One is plate three on page 30. I don't know what a "Very-Verithin" is, or how to tell one from a regular Verithin movement, but I think this is the best match case-wise. It's described as "bascine" which essentially means seamless. Jumping forward to page 2 on the price list, if this movement is possibly a VV4, then the price would have been $95. Another possibility is plate 12 on page 35. It's described as "semi-bascine" which I believe is because it's not seamless looking, but rather the center section sticks out a little. But this model did have a regular Verithin V4 as an option. If that's what it is, then page four of the price list shows a price of $110.
The "Very-Verithin" was only a case style that was even sleeker than the regular Verithin cases. Although Gruen refers to a special "VV4" movement for these cases, implying that it would be different from a "V4", there is actually no evidence it ever existed other than in this 1918 Price List. I have seen hundreds of V4 movements and have yet to see one marked "VV". Also you will not find a "VV" caliber in any of the Parts Catalogs.
Your case is not a "Very-Verithin" case as these were marked as such in the inner dust cover.
I said that Gruen was supplying complete watches however the customer could choose from different case styles and dials. So giving a more exact ID may proof difficult. I'll go through my sources as well tonight.
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