More than two years ago, I wrote about the Orient GM.
That watch used caliber 26960, an 8-beat (or, 4 Hz) movement that Orient
borrowed from Seiko, where it was called caliber 5216A.
Well, it turns out the GM was not the only 8 beat movement ever used by
Orient. So today, we'll look at three more examples – one dating back to the
late sixties, and two other closely related calibers presented in the 2000's
and put to use in Royal Orient models.
Caliber 41320 (and possibly additional caliber 41xxx family members) was
an 8-beat, hand-winding movement, small enough to fit in watches designed for
women and boys.
The exact origins of this caliber are very hard to track down. It looks
a bit different from other Orient movements of the time, so its design may have
been based on some Swiss movement. It was, however, manufactured by Orient in
Japan.
We found this movement in two types of watches from the late sixties and
early seventies. First, it was used in a unique dive watch (pictured above),
smaller in diameter than Orient's King Divers, which replaced the 1968
"Surfin' Diver". The other type of watch using caliber 41320 was a
line of ladies' models, named Orient Lausanne.
Why Orient chose to put a hi-beat movement in watches intended for boys
and women, is not clear… it does however hint that the movement was indeed
borrowed from an outside source for its small size, and the higher frequency
was just a "side effect".
Note that some versions of the Lausanne had a higher jewel count of 21 /
25 stones vs. the basic movement's 17 stones. The higher versions may have been
used in more expensive Lausanne references.
Caliber 41320-based watches are quite rare nowadays, but one would occasionally
pop up on sale. I did not see any such piece in really good condition recently
though. So it is quite difficult to say anything about the quality of these
pieces. If any reader has first-hand experience with this caliber, please share
your impressions with us (here in comments, or on our Facebook page) – that would
be very interesting!
Some three decades passed before Orient returned to hi-beat territory.
It was in 2004, at the re-launch of the Royal Orient moniker, that Orient chose
to present a new high-end movement developed in-house: caliber 88700.
Cal. 88700 featured 30 jewels, 45-hour power reserve, +6/-4 seconds per day
accuracy, automatic and hand winding, central seconds, a date wheel, and – yes!
– 28,800 beats per hour frequency. That must have made Orient engineers very proud,
and the achievement was mentioned in any historical reviews published by Orient
ever since.
The first model to use the new movement was reference WE0011JA boasting
a lovely silver dial with high decorations. Next followed ref. WE0021JA (same
dial, different logo), WE0031JA (black dial), and WE0041JA (same dial, leather
strap instead of bracelet).
Four years later, in 2008, Orient presented caliber 88A00, which was
very similar in design and specs, but with the addition of a power reserve
indicator. Two models would be using the 88A00: reference WE0011JB (silver
dial) and WE0021JB (black dial).
And that's it for now. You have the complete chronicles of Orient high
beat movements: the 8-beat cal. 26960, cal. 41xxx, and cal. 88x00; and the
10-beat caliber 9980.
Photos of Lausanne models and of the 8-beat diver were obtained from various sale ads of pre-owned watches.
Great post! I was curious about this 8 beat ladies movement from Orient as well.
ReplyDeleteThere is one version which looks like (I may be wrong here) a Seiko 2205 with the autowind module removed.
The one in your post has some resemblance to the FHF 64 (main wheel above barrel).
Thanks! I guess more detective work is needed to get to the bottom of these movements.
DeleteI must be wrong about the 2205 as it is tonneau shaped instead of a circle.
ReplyDeletehttps://postimg.cc/sB5C2cq2
I also spent hours examining some tonneau shaped movements, trying to figure out which resembles what... :)
DeleteI have Orient 8 beat 413 in pretty good shape. I opened the case and it is very solid construction: monocoque case with interesting system of spring locks.
ReplyDeleteThanks! It's good to see such curious models in the wild... do you have the jewel count of the movements in your watch?
DeleteYes, it says 21j and then 41340
Delete