Glashütte Original News: Senator Observer 1911 - Julius Assmann

Dec 20, 2011,08:17 AM
 

Honouring its rich heritage of more than 165 years of superior watchmaking in Glashütte, Germany, Glashütte Original is proud to present the Limited Edition Senator Observer 1911 - Julius Assmann. 

 

Glashütte Original Senator Observer 1911 – Julius Assmann



This exceptional timepiece, handmade in the firm's manufactory and limited to 25 pieces, pays homage to the pioneering spirit of two extraordinary men, Julius Assmann and Roald Amundsen. 

  

Julius Assmann started his company at the age of 25 and is revered today as one of the founding fathers of watchmaking in Glashütte. Pocket watches, chronometers and observation watches crafted by Assmann and his employees were to play a significant role in establishing the company's far-reaching reputation: the observation watches in particular were known for their remarkable precision and superior craftsmanship.

 

Before setting out on his historic voyage, Roald Amundsen acquired a number of Assmann observation watches, including one crafted by the young Glashütte watchmaker Paul Löwe in 1907/08.  Löwe's watch proved to be exceptionally precise, and he was urged to send it for testing to the German Naval Observatory in Hamburg, the institute officially responsible for testing and certifying the accuracy of navigational timekeepers made in Germany. It was there that Roald Amundsen saw the watch, and he purchased it in 1910.

 

On December 14th, 1911, the Norwegian polar explorer and his team became the first persons ever to reach the geographic South Pole.

 

Observation watches, also known as "deck watches" were used by navigation officers in conjunction with marine chronometers and other instruments to determine as precisely as possible a ship's position at sea, and Amundsen will have made good use of his observation watches during his voyage to Antarctica on the polar ship, Fram.

 

Once he and his team set out from their base camp at Framheim on the Bay of Whales, however, the time kept by his observation watches became the only standard: one watch was set to a home time and assumed the function of the marine chronometer on a ship; a second watch was set to local time; measurement of the difference between the two was used to calculate, using spherical trigonometry, the team's position during the trek to the South Pole; a compass and sextant were also used.

 

Thus, Amundsen's observation watches were absolutely critical to his mission: without them, he could never have reached his destination, much less claimed victory for Norway. In Oslo today, the Fram Museum displays, along with many other artifacts documenting the historic trek, one of Amundsen's Glashütte observation watches, complete with the inscription "J. Assmann – Glashütte" on the dial. 



 

Glashütte Original Limited Edition Senator Observer 1911 - Julius Assmann

 

Observation watches continued to be manufactured in Glashütte until 1971, a testament to the ongoing production of high quality timepieces even during challenging times. 

 

This splendid timepiece, presented in a limited edition of 25 pieces, bears the name "Senator Observer", in honour of Julius Assmann's observation watches and Amundsen's achievement in reaching the South Pole. The Senator Observer 1911's lacquered silver-grain dial is built up slowly from three separate layers of white lacquer, the third of which features a finely textured, silver-grain surface.  The dial presents subsidiary seconds and power reserve displays at 9 and 3 o'clock respectively;  Glashütte Original's characteristic panorama date display at 6 o'clock; and blued and polished sweep minute and pear-shaped hour hands.  A milled railroad chapter ring frames the black Arabic numerals.

 

The Senator Observer Limited Edition 1911 - Julius Assmann features a cylindrical case fashioned in white gold, complemented by a brown calfskin strap evocative of the age of pioneering adventurers and explorers epitomized by Amundsen. 

  

The case back, engraved with the limited edition number (01/25), frames an antireflective sapphire crystal bearing the dates of Amundsen's arrival at the South Pole and its centennial anniversary: 14 Dec. 1911 – 14 Dec 2011;the name Julius Assmann – Glashütte i/SA, and "Tribute to R. Amundsen".



 

An extraordinary movement honours Julius Assmann

 

At the heart of the Senator Observer 1911 - Julius Assmann is the automatic caliber 100-14, an exquisitely finished self-winding movement. Traditional observation watches used hand-wound movements; Glashuette Original has chosen to outfit the Senator Observer 1911 - Julius Assmann with a contemporary automatic movement from our manufactory to maximize comfort for the wearer. Thus, the 'Ab Auf' indicator on the dial represents a true power reserve, rather than a simple indication of running time.

 

The base movement is outfitted with a reset mechanism, which makes for easier synchronization of the second hand with standard time. In contrast to other reset mechanisms, the second hand is not coupled with the winding stem or the crown. This results in the balance continuing to oscillate and the movement continuing to run despite the crown being pulled out, which considerably reduces wear and tear on materials. The reset mechanism is activated by pushing a separate corrector.

 

A bi-directional winding rotor delivers energy to a patented, stepped reduction gear, and then to two smaller, serially operating spring barrels. Large amounts of energy are transmitted to the mainspring, and the spring barrel is filled quickly.

 

Visible through the sapphire case back, the Caliber 100-14 is a fitting tribute to Julius Assmann. The movement features the characteristic Glashütte three-quarter plate, screw-mounted gold chatons, and a rotor with 21-carat gold oscillating weight and the gold-plated double-G mark that distinguishes high end mechanical watches from Glashütte Original. 



 

Press Release 

 

 

 

This message has been edited by AnthonyTsai on 2011-12-20 08:21:18

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Comments: view entire thread

 

now that is a very attractive piece:) [nt]

 
 By: playtime : December 20th, 2011-08:31
No message body

Nice watch.

 
 By: VMM : December 20th, 2011-09:03
Very German. Would love to see a pic of the movement. Thanks. Vte

good looking watch... but

 
 By: Mostel : December 20th, 2011-09:38
two things... the name Assman continues to be, shall we say, unfortunate. And as excellent as the dial looks, the date font seems to not go very well with the hour numerals... But again, this is a gorgeous watch. Congratulations to GO. This message has be... 

We should strive . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 20th, 2011-12:24
. . . to exhibit a modicum of sensitivity when words, and particularly names, in other languages come across as unintentionally humorous. I can appreciate the relative sensitivity of your phrasing, Mostel, but it would've been kinder to not mention it at ... 

Art

 
 By: Mostel : December 21st, 2011-18:00
I appreciate your comments as always, but this is an elephant in the room, is it not? I suppose it would be nicer to say nothing, but the name of a watch has an emotional effect on a collector, and I meant it in that sense only. I meant it only to say may... 

Please allow me to respond with . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 22nd, 2011-11:35
. . . a parable of sorts, Mostel. I'm acquainted with a person whose given name has an offensive connotation in the English language, and which must've caused him endless pain and embarrassment. He went on to become a highly regarded professional, and whi... 

At some point in the future

 
 By: Mostel : December 22nd, 2011-19:12
I hope we can discuss this parable over a tableful of watches....there is certainly a good conversation in this. meantime, I will take your parable to heart, and appreciate its meaning.

Seeing as how we're both located . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 23rd, 2011-17:54
. . . in California, I believe that we will, Mostel ! Happy holidays, Art

Good observation on the font difference.

 
 By: ArthurSG : December 20th, 2011-21:28
Would have been nice to have them the same but a nice watch still nonetheless.

Languages and names

 
 By: stromer : December 22nd, 2011-00:24
Hi Mostel, I read your and Art's posts below. So I am not going to reopen the discussion here. I would just like to offer some information about the name of Mr. Julius that may be helpful to overcome potential sentiments that might accompany the name for ... 

Much to like here...

 
 By: MichaelC : December 20th, 2011-10:41
I happen to have my SC on today and am able to compare some similar details. I like the idea of the seconds reset, even if it is done with a corrector. The numerals look great, although the date font does seem to clash. On that note, I could do without th... 

Sage observations, Michael. One of the most underappreciated aspects . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 20th, 2011-13:30
. . . of the cal 100 movement is the seconds re-set mechanism, which eliminates unnecessary shock when synchronizing the watch with a reference clock. This type of subtle yet meaningful ingenuity is what differentiates Glashütte Original movements from th... 

I can sure see a SS version with a black dial...

 
 By: MichaelC : December 20th, 2011-14:12
Hmmmm..... And I understand the inclusion of the date complication, a GO signature. But I think it would be OK without too. The other details I know well - the milled minute track, grainy dial, subdial styles... all add up to make this an exceptional offe... 

That, I would take in a second :-)

 
 By: KIH : December 20th, 2011-15:01
SS and BD - nice! Of course, I like WG case with WD/BH, too. Blued hands on white dial are so classic. Ken

As for me

 
 By: BluNotte : December 21st, 2011-07:02
Pt with BD and Blued steel hands! Of course dont forget to throw the rotor out the window into the Glashutte valley and let the animals stomp on it! Iranai! Stephen

That was a rather . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 21st, 2011-10:35
. . . umm, exuberant way of saying you'd prefer a manual winding movement, Stephen ;-) . . .

I guess i am perpetually superabundant in my passion!

 
 By: BluNotte : December 22nd, 2011-07:54
For things Hergestellt in Deutschland of course in particular. Tschuss! Stephen

Case size is 44mm (nt)

 
 By: AnthonyTsai : December 21st, 2011-07:52
.

Thank you AT. nt [nt]

 
 By: MichaelC : December 22nd, 2011-20:57
No message body

Without date for me, please!

 
 By: amanico : December 20th, 2011-14:18
This is a superb watch, which would be even nicer without date, IMO. Observation watch... Another interesting detail. A black dial would sublimate it. No pics of the case back, in stock? Best, Nicolas.

I don;t know. I thnk the big date is a nice addition with Mostel's

 
 By: ArthurSG : December 20th, 2011-21:32
comment as a sligt detractor..not the Assman comment though

I just read Mostel's comment. ;)

 
 By: amanico : December 20th, 2011-22:11
To be seen in the flesh... Would it be seen as an " Inversed Dato ( First Generation ) " dial? Best, Nicolas.

its inspiration.....

 
 By: Hororgasm : December 20th, 2011-14:26
looks quite good for now...we need to see the back and its movement. picture taken from GO best, Horo...  

That looks like a particularly fine B uhr my friend!

 
 By: BluNotte : December 21st, 2011-07:01
I waNT! Thanks for sharing such heavy pieces! Stephen

Nice...

 
 By: KIH : December 20th, 2011-15:07
... but I wonder why they chose automatic movement for this one. Manual winding would feel more classic... This is nice, and I will have to see it in person, but I might prefer the standard SC from that aspect alone.... Just my selfish taste. Ken

Looks great save the font difference. So observatory grade

 
 By: ArthurSG : December 20th, 2011-21:34
with the same stop seconds reset as in the Chronometer? (great feature for an observatory watch). The Call 100 is a great calibre. Any idea on the size?

44mm (nt)

 
 By: AnthonyTsai : December 21st, 2011-07:52
.

About that date font...

 
 By: jmpTT : December 21st, 2011-08:34
...as a constant lurker on these forums, I recall that the date font on the Senator 60's was not universally well-received either. Unlike the Senator 60's font,it would appear that the font used on hour ring on this watch would not have to be squished bef... 

Date

 
 By: marcjlmd : December 21st, 2011-08:51
Beautiful watch. I am in the utilitarian group (!), so I love the date. Makes the watch so easy for daily wear. But I suffer from a very small wrist, so would far prefer to see this at 39 or 40mm. Marc

Very nice watch...But

 
 By: =RWK= : December 21st, 2011-10:10
I would switch the position of the seconds and PR subdials. -- Richard.

really nice

 
 By: scott7 : December 22nd, 2011-06:31
I like this design a lot, but more importantly I think it represents what Glashutte Original is to me: a watchmaking company that is most concerned with preserving and furthering the art and science of watchmaking. Sure, that sounds high minded but from w... 

That's an opinion . . .

 
 By: Dr No : December 23rd, 2011-18:29
. . . I wholeheartedly share. While I don't begrudge the efforts of other manufacturers in creating a legend for their brand, I do appreciate un pretentiousness of Glashütte Original. Cordially, Art

Wow! What a beautiful piece! [nt]

 
 By: rosspanics : December 24th, 2011-10:25
No message body

does not work for me

 
 By: donizetti : December 25th, 2011-02:55
a B-Uhr with an automatic movement is not a felicitous choice, especially not if linked to a famous Glashütte watchmaler - surprised they were not more in tune with their own history here. Also do not like the placement of the date, and in general th...