December 26, 2012, 19:13
Robert V. JonesHamilton 4 foot dials
I know usually four foot dials were early and usually you see the double sunk on 992 but were there other early movements such as 960 that they were used on.
December 26, 2012, 19:14
Robert V. JonesAlso are they called the same as the same dial in 3 foot versions
December 26, 2012, 20:31
Robert V. JonesNice dials Jon I have some other also but do you know if these were used on specific models like 992 or were all double sunk variations used on all models that took 4 foot dials.
December 26, 2012, 20:33
Jon HartThe 2nd dial i listed was on a 992, and the other was 975
I would guess yours was on a 992
December 26, 2012, 20:37
Robert V. JonesI didnt know if specific dials were specific to certain models or if it was just whatever the customer wanted on whichever movement they bought.
December 26, 2012, 22:36
Mike HodgeRob, your first photo appears to be a "factory remake" 4 foot dial. I have seen several of these that are actual Hamilton dials but, they have the manuscript lettering rather than script. My understanding is that these were made to replace originals after the beginning of the manuscript brand name on the dials.
Often, the DS dials were on the higher grade Hamilton watches and the SS were on the lower grade movements but I believe you could option any dial for the price.
December 26, 2012, 22:38
Larry LamphierThe thing that I noticed was that one is not a script dial. I have one now on a 990 on now and had a question as to why it is not a script dial.
Didn't the 4 foot dial end around 1909? And if so why is one of the dials in print, not script?
Regards,
Larry
December 26, 2012, 22:42
Robert V. JonesOk Thanks Also it explains why I never seen a four foot dial like I posted most I have are like the ones Jon posted.
December 27, 2012, 10:28
Buster BeckRob's picture shows a 4 footed dial with BLOCK signature made by Hamilton. These were made in the early 20's since there was a lot of the 4 footed dials that needed replacing by then.
Hamilton opted to use the BLOCK style on these replacement dials to keep up with the "newer" BLOCK signature [or it could have been a factory oversight] that replaced the script signature dials as Mike correctly alluded to. This should answer Lawrence's question also.
regards,
bb
December 27, 2012, 12:34
Robert V. JonesOk thanks for explanation Buster and everyones help.