• Apprentice
    25 Jul 2021, 7:40 p.m.

    Hello,

    Thank you for looking at my post. I think about selling a IWC watch that I
    inherited.

    I dont know anything about this watch/movement, and as my father always said
    "never sell anything you dont know the value of".

    I think it is a converted pocketwatch?

    On the movement is a number; 132344.

    Does somebody here knows more about this watch/movement? Are there a lot of
    these made, or is this a rare
    piece?

    Thank you for looking at it, have a great day,

    Thomas

    Thomas_v_d_broek@hotmail.com

  • Insider
    25 Jul 2021, 8:22 p.m.

    Hi Thomas,

    you are right, this is a converted Pocketwatch. The movement is a caliber 52
    dating to 1895. The movement was taken from a lepine type watch, that means
    winding stem - crown at 12 o'clock, small seconds at 6 o'clock position. The
    hand setting mechanism is realized with the pin at 1 o'clock position (moved
    to 4 at your watch). To use the lepine type movement in a wristwatch case and
    have the winding crown at 3 o'clock a new dial has ben created (not by IWC)
    that of course moves the small second sub dial to the wrong position at 9
    o'clock.

    The movement is surely original IWC, but the case the dial and the hands are
    not original. You can find a lot of this "marriage" type watches taht use
    pocket watch movements in a custom made oversize wrist watch case on a famous
    online auction platform.

    For collectors the watch has no value since it is not made by IWC. For others
    it has at least the value of the pocket watch movement. If you have inhertited
    maybe it has sentimental value to you.

    The caliber 52 was the workhorse movement of IWC at that time, which means it
    is not rare.

    br

    Cromagnonman

  • Apprentice
    27 Jul 2021, 9:08 p.m.

    Hi, thank your for your reply, it is really appreciated. Have a great day!