CHRONOGRAPH


Pocket chronograph

Russia Poljot "Aviator" watch with P3133 chronograph movement.

A 'chronograph' is a timepiece or watch with both timekeeping and stopwatch functions. Chronographs were produced as early as the 18th century but did not become popular until the 1820s. A Brief History of the Automatic Chronograph

Contents
Types
Notes
References

Types


There are several types of chronographs.[1]

★ 'Analog chronographs' show both time and stopwatch functions with analog hands. Typically the center hand will be used for stopwatch functions, while subdials may indicate seconds, stopwatch minutes and hours and (in some quartz chronographs) tenths or hundredths of a second. A variation of this chronograph is the 'Bull-one head', with the movement rotated 90 degrees, placing the crown and buttons at the top of the watch rather than the traditional location on side.

★ 'Digital chronographs' use a digital display for both timekeeping and stopwatch functions, either with separate displays or by switching modes on a single display.

★ 'Analog-digital chronographs' have a standard analog watch with permanent center seconds and a separate digital display that usually operates independently of the analog section. A fallback will reset to zero and then continue to run when the reset button is pushed while the stopwatch is running. In contrast, most mechanical chronographs will reset to zero only when the stopwatch is stopped.

Notes


1. History of the Chronograph Watch

References



From topoftheline.com

From ozdoba.net

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves