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There is a lot of literature on the Internet describing
the history and development of the Bulova Accutron, so I'm not going to repeat it on this site.
But as a very brief introduction, the Accutron is like no other battery driven watch, or mechanical
for that matter: it is driven by a tuning fork vibrating at 300-720 times a second,
depending on the model; as a result, it doesn' tick, but hummms.
The index mechanism also means the Accutrons are characterised by a constant sweeping seconds hand.
Some good links to other web sites are:
When the first 214 watch went on sale in 1960, Hamilton must have seen the writing on the wall
for their own electrics which had only come out 3 years earlier.
Although they didn't have those wonderful Richard Arbib
designed cases like the Hamilton
Electrics, the Accutrons had many
other things going for them: they were reliable and extremely accutate, you could see the tuning
forks on some of them (the Spaceviews), but most of all, they didn't tick, they hummmed!
So confident were Bulova about the accuracy, the hands on the 214s can only be set from the back;
there is no side crown. And they were right; forty-five years later, 214s are still running strong
and accurate with only a yearly battery change and an occassional service!
| Last Modified: Thursday, 17-Aug-2006 |
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