Internet Horology Club 185
Seikosha Military Chronometer

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March 14, 2005, 13:26
Fred R. Hougham
Seikosha Military Chronometer
Just finished taking these pictures of this Seikosha Chronometer # 1045
Enjoy
Fred


March 14, 2005, 13:26
Fred R. Hougham
b


March 14, 2005, 13:27
Fred R. Hougham
c


March 14, 2005, 13:28
Fred R. Hougham
d


March 14, 2005, 13:28
Fred R. Hougham
e


March 14, 2005, 13:30
Fred R. Hougham
f


March 14, 2005, 13:30
Fred R. Hougham
g


March 14, 2005, 13:31
Fred R. Hougham
h


March 14, 2005, 16:23
Phil Dellinger
Fred,

What a very interesting chronometer you have here. Would you please give us the dimensions for this timepiece?

Also, is the name Seikosha connected to the Seiko line of modern watches?

Thanks,
March 15, 2005, 10:40
Fred R. Hougham
Hi Phil,
These clocks were indeed the forerunners to the later Seiko's. This clock is from my fathers military collection. The clock is approximately 12" in diameter and about 5 " thick and very heavy.
I will take exact measurements and post them. He also has a 5 day Seikosha. As time permits I'll try to take some pictures of it and post them.
Regards
Fred
March 15, 2005, 12:54
Kevin Pestor
Thanks Fred, for the interesting timepiece.Since it has a platform escapement, or i believe that is what it is.Would this have been used on a navy vessel? Good pictures, looks quite heavy.
Smile
March 15, 2005, 19:30
Fred R. Hougham
Kevin,
Even though these used a platform escapement ( as you pointed out ) instead of a detent escapement like the Hamilton chronometers the best guess is yes. Note the first inscription on the lower edge of the case ( an anchor ) It would be nice if one of our members could read Japanese and could decipher the rest of the inscription.
Fred
March 16, 2005, 03:41
Mun Chor-Weng
Hello Fred,

The Japanese script that appeared on the clock is in kanji script which was derived from the Chinese script.
I can't read the first word very clearly, it appears the first two words may refer to ' marine vessel' and the rest of the words mean 'number eleven'.
You can find some information on the Japanese marine chronometer in the August 2002 issue ( #339) of the NAWCC Bulletin.

Mun C.W.
Singapore