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33xx is a frederic piguet movement Posted By: georges zaslavsky In Response To: Movement question for georges (Seismic Sam) Hi No,the 33xx family of movements is based on the frederic piguet 1285 es deluxe. It is not the most robust column wheel selfwinding chrono movement but a great bargain for the price. I'm not familiar with the "Frederic Piguet 1285" movement that Georges references... Georges, would you care to enlighten me? Was that a typo or ??? I don't know... Perhaps, 1285 is Piguet's internal name for movement Omega calls the c.33xx's. However the "Omega c.33xx is based on the F. Piguet 1185" contention is unfortunately a very commonly recited piece of misinformation often cited by people quoting John Holbrook's articles (among a number of other authors)... I've seen a number of instances where John erroneously states the c.33xx is based on the c.1185 and even that Omega (and not Swatch Group) owns F. Piguet. Here is one example...: Those are John's words, verbatim from his site. Allow me to dissect this a bit... "The caliber 3303 is Omega's first movement that can truly be considered a manufacturers movement since the Swatch Group acquisition of Omega." Using this reasoning, a Valjoux or an ETA movement could also be considered ‘a manufacturers movement’ too because Swatch Group has bought Valjoux in the late 1990's and has owned ETA for an far longer stretch of time. “Based on the Frederic Piquet caliber 1185,” This is clearly incorrect as I detailed in July of 2004 (fully six months before John's article): Omegac. 33xx is ? to the Piguet c.1185 Illustrated:
Omegac. 33xx is ? to the Piguet c.1185 Illustrated:
For what it's worth, the c.33xx movements are not based on the Fredric Piguet 1185 movement.
“The caliber 3303 is Omega's first movement that can truly be considered a manufacturers movement since the Swatch Group acquisition of Omega. Based on the Frederic Piquet caliber 1185, and produced in a Piquet facility now owned by Omega, the 3303 is a fantastic movement, with not only a pedigree in "high horology" but also some very noteworthy technology - a free sprung balance, column wheel control mechanism, and lever escapement. The 3303 is also finely decorated by Omega with rhodium plating, and Geneva waves and striping throughout. Unfortunately, since the watches launch in 2001, the 3303 and it's variants have been marred by some quality control issues. Omega has gone on record saying that the noted problems have been eliminated in the newest examples of the 3303, but examples still exist on dealer shelves that exhibit the infamous chronograph reset issue. Once the memory of the launch issues fade, the 3303 will likely be remembered as one of Omega's greatest achievements, and a true giant among chronograph movements. RATING: 8”
-- John Holbrook II, -- Comparative Review of the Rolex Cosmograph Daytona Reference 116520 VS. The Omega Speedmaster Broad Arrow Model3551. 20.00, December 26, 2004
“... and produced in a Piquet facility... ” The 3313 is the coaxial version of the 3301 and 3303. Agreed. The most durable movement when it comes to selfwinding chrono column wheel movements is the rolex 4130 I can't agree with this. The Rolex 4130 is too new to bestow this "crown" in my opinion. At least the Zenith El-Primero has a three dozen year plus - long established record. The Rolex 4130, which has only been in volume production since 2001, hasn't yet won a durability crown from Zenith yet. and when it comes to the handwound chrono column wheel movement it is the lemania 2310-2320 calibers. Oh, I suppose I can agree with Georges on this at least with an explanation... The Lemania c.1873 family of course isn't a column wheel movement, but it's every bit as durable as the 2310-2320's. The Zenith Prime, Elite and El-Primero HW movements are not as widely produced as the Lemania 2310-2320 has been throughout it's life, so it's hard to judge them because much fewer people have them. Landeron, Venus and Excelsior Park movements aren't generally considered to be the equal or equivalent to the Lemania movements. Which brings us to the Valjoux 71-72 family of movements. hope it helps regards georges p.s: eta doesn't play in the same ground than piguet, It's (ETA's) market segment is different thatn Piguet. and there is a huge difference between an eta movement finish and a piguet movement finsih same for quality Well, depends upon the watch producer too, as it varies greatly on the ETA end from say a Ventura who literally go through every movement they sell, adding value every step along the way, and a firm producing lower cost ETA/DuBois-Depraz based watches. |
-- Chuck | ||
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