1950 OMEGA Bumper Automatic Watch Cal. 351 Self-Winding Wristwatch

WA-0411
Out of stock
From omegawatches.com – “An automatic first 1931. Affecting the design of movement for generations to come, OMEGA prototyped the first automatic movement to use two weights. This new design enabled the winding of the movement in both directions, dramatically improving winding efficiency. What was one a prototype has since evolved to...

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IF THE MERCHANDISE YOU PURCHASE FROM Secondhand Horology, LLC (“Secondhand Horology”, “WE”, OR “US”) IS SUBJECT TO A THIRD PARTY WARRANTY, THEN THE MERCHANDISE WILL BE GOVERNED BY SUCH THIRD PARTY WARRANTY (TO THE EXTENT SUCH THIRD PARTY WARRANTY IS ASSIGNABLE BY US TO YOU) AND WILL NOT BE GOVERNED BY THIS LIMITED WARRANTY. IF THE MERCHANDISE YOU PURCHASE FROM US IS NOT SUBJECT TO A THIRD PARTY WARRANTY, Secondhand Horology WARRANTS THAT DURING THE WARRANTY PERIOD (DEFINED BELOW), THE MERCHANDISE THAT YOU PURCHASED FROM US WILL BE FREE FROM DEFECTS IN MATERIALS AND WORKMANSHIP.

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Secondhand Horology extends this limited warranty only to the consumer who originally purchased the merchandise (“you”) from Secondhand Horology. It does not extend to any subsequent owner or other transferee of the merchandise.

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If the merchandise or any portion of the merchandise that you purchase is subject to a third party warranty, Secondhand Horology hereby assigns to you all of its rights and remedies under such warranty to the extent that such rights and remedies are assignable. If the merchandise or any portion of the merchandise is not subject to any other warranty as of the date of purchase by you, and subject to the terms of this Limited Warranty, Secondhand Horology

 warrants that the merchandise shall be free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use for a period of one (1) year from the date of purchase by you (the “Warranty Period”). The Warranty Period is not extended if we repair or replace the merchandise. We may change the availability of this limited warranty at our discretion, but any changes will not be retroactive.

WHAT ARE YOUR REMEDIES UNDER THIS WARRANTY?

With respect to any defective merchandise during the Warranty Period, we will, in our sole discretion repair or replace such merchandise (or the defective part) free of charge. We will also pay for shipping and handling fees to return the repaired or replacement merchandise to you if we elect to repair or replace the defective merchandise.

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To obtain warranty service, you must call +1(217)-802-6098 or email our Customer Service Department at info@secondhandhorology.com during the Warranty Period to obtain a Defective Merchandise Authorization (“DMA”) number. Read more about our return and warranty service policies.

LIMITATION OF LIABILITY

THE REMEDIES DESCRIBED ABOVE ARE YOUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDIES AND OUR ENTIRE LIABILITY FOR ANY BREACH OF THIS LIMITED WARRANTY. OUR LIABILITY SHALL UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES EXCEED THE ACTUAL AMOUNT PAID BY YOU FOR THE DEFECTIVE MERCHANDISE, NOR SHALL WE UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES BE LIABLE FOR ANY CONSEQUENTIAL, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES OR LOSSES, WHETHER DIRECT OR INDIRECT.

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Secondhand Horology is honored to have the opportunity to serve you. That is why we stand by all of our products with a full 12-month limited warranty. If an item we sell you should fail as a result of a manufacturer's defect at any time during the first 12 months, we will repair or replace the item at absolutely no cost to you.

If your watch has any symptoms of abnormally gaining time, losing time, or not keeping proper time please do not hesitate to contact us by phone or email. If it is determined by Secondhand Horology that a repair under warranty is required one of our trained watch professionals will direct you on how to safely and efficiently ship the watch to us.


Not covered by warranty:

  • Regular wear-and-tear from normal use.
  • External damage to the product. Any damages resulting from wear to the watch case, crystal/glass, watch bracelet, watch bezel, straps, screws, crown/stem, finishes, clasps/buckles, or any other physical damage to the watch.
  • Defects caused by outside force or improper use. Consequential and incidental damages.
  • The loss of precious, semi-precious stones from settings.
  • Outside modifications and third party repair attempts of any kind will void the warranty.
  • Any damage if used under conditions which exceed the watch manufacturer’s water resistance guidelines.
  • Watches that are labeled as water resistant feature a screw down crown. The crown must be screwed down properly at all times to keep the watch casing watertight. Water damage is not covered under the warranty unless it is proven defective by the Secondhand Horology.
  • Shipping cost to Secondhand Horology.

Secondhand Horology is determined to stand behind every part of your shopping experience. The Secondhand Horology warranty allows you to make a completely risk-free purchase. This has been our policy and our promise since we began nearly three decades ago serving customers on a local level. Now, we are standing by this policy as we serve online customers from around the world. We look forward to serving you and giving you the incredible value and experience you deserve.

Product Description
From omegawatches.com – “An automatic first 1931. Affecting the design of movement for generations to come, OMEGA prototyped the first automatic movement to use two weights. This new design enabled the winding of the movement in both directions, dramatically improving winding efficiency. What was one a prototype has since evolved to become the industry standard and is still in use today, powering a wide spectrum of mechanical watches.”

AUTOMATIC WATCH MOVEMENT

Self-winding mechanism for automatic watches, a huge development within the horological industry. The Geneva Society of Arts reported in 1777 that “fifteen minutes walking was necessary to wind the watch sufficiently for eight days”, and the following year reported that it was selling well. History says that the invention of the automatic movement dates back to 1977, it also says to have been invented by Abraham-Louis Perrelet (1729 – 1826) – “One of the greatest watchmaking references of all time.” Perrelet was a Swiss watchmaker fascinated by watchmaking professions, as a teenager he devotes himself to the construction of a certain number of precision instruments.

From the 1770s onwards, Abraham-Louis Perrelet applied himself to perfecting a system which, from one single initial impulse, would continue to function indefinitely. It was until 1777 that he develops his completely revolutionary invention: the automatic / self-winding movement. The mechanism transferred the movement of the wearer into energy, using an oscillating weight inside the large watch that moved up and down that powered the timepiece for around eight hours a day. It worked on the same principle as a modern wristwatch, to wind the watch as the owner walks and/or moves.

While Perrelet is thus widely acknowledged as the inventor of the automatic movement, through his invention, a watch movement using a weight pivoting at the side of the movement. In 1778, “the automatic movement was reinvented”, the Belgian clockmaker, watchmaker and a precursor of the industrial age, Hubert Sarton (1748 – 1828) created his version and presented the first drawing and accurate description of an automatic watch movement with a central rotor, then, the design is attributed to him. “It was after the launch of this movement that automatic watches became popular with the general public. People began wearing automatic watches as part of their daily routine.”

No matter how, there is still debates around who first invented the automatic movement. “When Sarton first published his designs in Paris, he claimed that Perrelet was inspired by his designs.”

In a large workshop with numerous employees, Sarton created a variety of timepieces throughout his career, he also concentrated on the production of skeleton clocks in a variety of models – all equally remarkable for their extraordinary quality and diversity. An enlightened man of his time, with a considerable career as a long series of developments, in 1778, Sarton filed a patent at the French Academy of Sciences and become famous for inventing the automatic watch based on a rotor principle. “At once a devoted horologist, mechanic and inventor, Hubert Sarton was one of the major figures of horology in late eighteenth-century Liège.”

Likewise, following the work of Perrelet, other watchmakers also created automatic watches from about 1777 on. However, the automatic watch was popularized by Abraham Louis Breguet’s design. He bought Perrelet’s designs for the automatic movement and worked on these designs to adapt them and make improvements. Breguet’s automatic movement was used in pocket watches. “Unfortunately, his design of the movement was deemed unreliable by many watch wearers. They fell out of popularity with European consumers around the year 1800.”

Automatic Wristwatch

It was until 1926 that Fortis introduced the first wristwatch with an automatic winding rotor designed by the British watchmaker John Harwood. Harwood modeled the new design on the one that Abraham-Louis Perrelet devised for pocket watches in the 18th century. Harwood culminated in the first prototype of a self-winding wristwatch that was created from a discarded pocket watch. He also was inspired by the actions of a wooden see-saw in a playground – he noted how the energy from the bump-stop sent the plank back into the air.

From the Northern Watch Co Magazine, “Harwood’s original automatic had two plungers, bit like miniature shock absorbers on a motorcycle, to act as pushers inside the case. The rotor ran on a little track and bounced between the two plungers. Harwood staked all he had on his own watch factory in 1928 and started making his watches, but the crash of `29 and the Depression put him out of business. (…) That left the field open for the Swiss and the Americans, who were very big on watchmaking in the 1930s.”

Omega is well-known for both aesthetically and mechanical innovations, thanks to that, Omega made its debut into automatic wristwatches in 1943 when Omega first commercialized an automatic moment built around the “bumper” principle, the caliber 28.10 (renamed 330 in 1949 and became the basis of the calibers 34_ and 35_) bumper automatic movement – considered to be one of Omega’s legendary calibers. The term “bumper” refers to a type of self-winding, automatic movement which were very popular from the 1930s to 1950s, usually from Jaeger LeCoultre, Omega, Mido and more.

Bumper automatic watches were expensive when new and consequently were typically looked after well. Omega among the last to abandon the bumper technology, they manufactured these bumper mechanisms until 1955. By the 1950s, all the top tier Swiss makers gradually introduced rotor winding movements and certainly by 1960, bumper movements had all but disappeared from the industry as a whole.

Bumper vs. Rotor

While a conventional automatic lets the rotor slip back and forth using gravity (the rotor spins a full 360 degrees), a bumper automatic watch works by using kinetic energy (an oscillating weight) to bounce the rotor from one side of the watch to the other (a bumper moves back and forth at about 120 degrees), thus winding it as you move your wrist, the bumper have two springs inside that send the rotor back on its original path. This bumping can be felt by the person wearing the watch.
 
OMEGA
Bumper Automatic
Wristwatch

Dated from 1950, this is a stunning mid-century highly collectible Omega bumper automatic wristwatch, ref. 6266-7.

It is a bumper self-winding watch powered with an original Omega movement caliber 351, 17 jewels, sweep second, Swiss made.

Still the original (in excellent condition) beige dial with gold hour marks, luminous hour marks as well, bold minute tracks and gold luminous matching hands.

Cased in a very elegant 34mm round case and fancy lug design, all in 14K yellow gold filled and fitted with a brand-new brown Genuine Leather two-piece strap.

It is a very good looking watch! This watch is in lovely condition. Runs very well, keeps great time.

Thank you for looking!  Please feel free to contact us with any questions, or respectful offers.    

Movement:
OMEGA WATCH Co.
Swiss
Caliber 351
17 Jewels
Serial Number 12573702

Case Back Signed:
Omega Watch Co.
Ross
6266-7
14K Gold Filled
1258028

Measures (mm):
Case Diameter 34
Case Lug to Lug 40 
Case Thickness 10.3 
Lug Width 17.5
Band Width 18

Vintage watches are traditionally smaller than today's watches. Men's watches typically measure between 29-36mm (some larger, some smaller) wide excluding the crown. In the listing details we typically try to do our best to list all pertinent dimensions of a watch. If you don't see it, or we failed to do so, please reach out to us. Women's watches from the 1900s-1970s were also much smaller than todays offerings. Please also feel free to ask any questions you have pertaining to size.

We prefer to shoot photographs outside when weather is permitting. However, when we shoot indoors, please be aware that we shoot our photographs inside of lightboxes that are lit with 360 LED bulbs. This indeed magnifies any flaws. Usually, they are much less obvious to the naked eye. Having said that, we never photoshop any of our photography, remove blemishes, etc. We adjust light when necessary, but what you see is what you are getting, and we take pride in that.

The condition is pre-owned.
The item may have some signs of cosmetic wear, but is fully operational and functions as intended.
See all the photos, feel free to ask questions if you have any.

It will be carefully packed.

Check out my other items listed.
Thanks for looking and good luck with your bids.

WA-0411

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