The History of Vertex Watches and The Dirty Dozen Story/Vertex Bronze 75 Edition Watch Celebrates The End Of World War II

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The next major release from UK-based Vertex is a bronze-cased version of the extremely popular M100 collection of military-inspired watches. Known as the Vertex Bronze 75, the special set of watches is also meant to honor the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II in 1945. A full hands-on review of the Vertex M100 watch can be found on aBlogtoWatch here.

Back during the more than decade-long conflict, Vertex was one of a dozen watchmakers that officially produced military watches for the British government. These twelve watchmakers were known as the “dirty dozen,” and they produced a particular watch specification for general infantry use. After the war, a lot of soldiers continued to wear the military watches in civilian life and so ushered in a new era of importance for military-inspired wristwatch fashion.

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Bronze is among the most popular watch case materials today when it comes to timepiece enthusiast interests. Its warm sheen and tendency to organically oxidize attractively make bronze an interesting alternative to steel — without costing more. Having been rendered in a few styles, bronze metal is now available as the base case material, adding the attractive “patina” metal to the steel-cased M100 watches that were previously produced. The Bronze 75 watch case is 40mm-wide and water-resistant to 100 meters. The back of the case is in steel and is a replica of the precise casebacks fitted the Vertex Cal 59 WWW watches produced in 1944 and 1945, complete with product military serial and edition numbers.

Inside the Vertex M100 Bronze 75 is a thin manually wound movement that features the time with subsidiary seconds dial. Swiss Made, this ETA Peseux caliber 7001 movement operates at 4Hz with about two days of power reserve. Over the watch dial is an AR-coated domed sapphire crystal, and each of the Arabic hour numbers on the dial are produced from solid pieces of luminous material (a major upgrade when compared with original Vertex military watches from WWII).


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MADE FOR THE MILITARY

The Vertex M100 is a faithful homage to our Cal59 WWW made for the War Office during World War II. The M100 is available to serving military personnel and military veterans.

The M100 has a hand-wound, bespoke ETA 7001 mechanical movement with rhodium finish and Côtes de Genève decoration. It has a moulded Super-LumiNova ® dial and a brushed steel 40mm case, box crystal glass and is waterproof to 100m.

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Noteworthy for its quality straps as much as its watches, Vertex supplies three straps with each Bronze 75 timepiece. The straps include a “vintage” brown leather strap, an “A.F.0210 green fabric strap, which is a replica of the straps used during World War II, and a special Zulu Alpha ZA strap. The watch comes with quick-release spring bars, making strap changes easy rather than a chore requiring tools.

To learn more about the Vertex Bronze 75, Don Cochrane (Chairman of Vertex) answers questions for the aBlogtoWatch audience. The Vertex Bronze 75 watch has a price of £2,700 (including VAT) and £2,250 excluding VAT. Now let’s hear from Mr. Cochrane of Vertex watches.

aBlogtoWatch: What started as a project to revive a family name, the Vertex brand is now a real business. What do you have to say about being in the watch industry?

Don Cochrane: It’s been an unbelievable learning experience, and I am very happy to say generally a very pleasurable one. Not only has Vertex’s return been well received by the horological world, in general, but somewhat surprisingly by other watchmakers, too; they have been incredibly supportive. I am now in a group of five British watch companies that are in regular contact, sharing ideas and issues. The camaraderie helps a lot — it can be a lonely world running a company, and it’s wonderful to have a few wise heads to bounce ideas off.

My technical learning curve has been steep but not unexpected. Much of technology in a mechanical watch remains unchanged for years, but it’s the small advances in materials that I have really tried to take advantage of. The introduction of the molded Super-LumiNova in our watches has not only given us an aesthetic point of difference but it is also absolutely one of our owners’ favorite features.

aBlogtoWatch: The Vertex M100 was launched with a special purchase scheme whereby buyers would give other buyers access to buying the limited edition watches. Is that how Vertex watched are still purchased? What did you learn from starting a watch brand that way?

Don Cochrane: The idea at the start was to create a community around the M100 and Vertex. It worked very well and is still a strong feature. As our understanding of our story has become more focused, we have now made the M100 only available to active military personnel and military veterans. We feel it’s really important for them to have ownership of a watch based on the piece that was made for them originally.

A lot of what we’re doing now and will be doing in the future takes its narrative from that military background. Of course, Vertex also has watches available to civilians available directly from Vertex in London, although many are limited editions. A lot of brands at the moment go for an exponential growth model. Our aim is for long term sustainability, not to saturate the market.

aBlogtoWatch: Mechanical wrist watches are romantic if anything. Which is probably how one might describe the appeal of bronze as a watch case material. Tell us about your own feelings toward bronze as a watch case material, and help explain how it adds to the allure of the M100 collection.

Don Cochrane: Bronze has always had a romantic historical significance, being one of the first metals worked by human hand. Bronze also has an importance within military equipment from the shackles on the rigging of ships to the compasses carried by so many soldiers. Even the medals and statues that signified the campaigns and achievements from that time were wrought in bronze. A watch case made of bronze gains its own patina, which goes even further to signify the passage of time. I think the way the Bronze 75 has turned out really has been one of my proudest moments at Vertex.

aBlogtoWatch: Vertex was one of the original “dirty dozen” watchmakers to be selected to produce particular military wristwatches during World War II. Can you explain the dirty dozen story and how Vertex fits into it?

Don Cochrane: In 1943, the British war office saw the importance of having a general use timepiece for the armed forces. Until then almost all service watches were personal civilian items. A specification was soon drawn up, they were to be accurate, reliable, and both waterproof and shockproof. These watches had a black dial, Arabic numerals, luminous hour and minute hands, luminous hour markers, a railroad minute track, shatterproof crystal, and a stainless-steel case. Powering them would be a 15-jewel manual hand-wound movement.

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The Bronze 75 has been created to mark the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II, The Bronze 75 is a finely honed 40mm tribute to the watch Vertex produced for the British military in 1944 and 1945.

Case size 40mm, Case thickness is 11mm. Lug width 20mm and the lug to lug is 48mm

Movement cal. 10 1/2 ETA 7001, TOP execution, 17 jewels, bronze CuSn8 case body and bezel, stainless steel case back.

Water-resistant to 100M.

Double curved top sapphire crystal with anti-reflecting treatment AR08 + AR06.

Black matt dial with SLN 7501C arabic numbers.

Vintage brown leather strap with 2 spring bars with quick-release system, bronze CuSn8 18mm tongue buckle.

Delivered in an official Pelican case with Bronze edition plate.

Zulu Alpha ZA Vertex 75 Strap.

A.F.0210. strap (replica of the strap used in World War II).

PLEASE NOTE THE BRONZE CASE WILL GAIN ITS OWN PATINA IN TIME. SALTWATER AND CHLORINATED WATER WILL ACCELERATE THE PATINA EFFECT

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Company Overview
Vertex was founded in 1916 by Claude Lyons and became one of the largest British watch makers, refounded by Claude's Great Grandson in 2016 it now produces watches true to the ideals of that initial endeavour


The Military code for these watches was W.W.W. (watches wristlet waterproof). With British watch factories concentrating on munitions and weapons manufacturing, requisition officers were sent off to Switzerland to find companies that could fulfill the order. In the end, 12 companies would come to the call this brief: Buren, Cyma, Eterna, Grana, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Lemania, Longines, IWC, Omega, Record, Timor, and Vertex. (Although Vertex was a British watch company, it had a Swiss manufacturing plant.)

aBlogtoWatch: Your vintage field watch re-creation project in the Vertex M100 was a hit. But it is a watch with many competitors. What have you come to realize you did correctly from a product perspective in the M100 watch collection?

Don Cochrane: When I started Vertex and consequently began work on the designs for our first watch, I knew I wanted to base it around our calibre 59 WWW. First, I thought it was a good idea to move quite far away from the original DNA to a much more modern look, taking what I like most from many modern watches and some of the principles from our Cal 59. However, the longer I spent with the original Cal 59, the more perfect it seemed. Then it became a real struggle to make a modern watch that did truly pay homage to it. I wanted the scale to be correct, so moved up to 40mm but keept the same large sub-second and balance in the numerals and railway track minute marks. The syringe hands had to exactly intersect the minute track, and the markers on the sub-second I had to match to the orientation of the marker on the original.

The sub-seconds was the hardest thing. If you look at all modern interpretations of WWW watches, they generally have very small sub-seconds because modern movements have already defined where that sub-seconds hand has to be. We spent about six months working with ETA to ensure that it truly represented the original, reaching from the bottom of the dial to the center mark. I always love the way the six had been lost in the five and seven had been cut, so really wanted to keep that to again modern interpretations seem to have lost that honesty. I’d like to think of those factors and the community that comes with owning a Vertex what has really made it work so well.

Learn more or order via the Vertex Watches website here.

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The Vertex Bronze 75 watch has a price of £2,700 (including VAT) and £2,250 excluding VAT. :banghead:
 
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very nice WW1 commerorative

HU 7001 engine...Z NOVA around 1/3 price...true...different watches...but yet...same engine


Mechanical watches in the under-$1,000 price range tend to be thicker and larger these days. A 42 mm x 12 mm automatic can pass for a dress watch, and even the slimmer manual offerings are mostly thicker than 6 mm—until now.

Christopher Ward has managed to stuff a manual ETA 7001 into a slender 39 mm x 5.95 mm case. As the name suggests, the final watch is 5.95 mm tall. The kicker, though, is the price: £595 ($845USD). [Update: U.S. pricing has been released and it is even better than the exchange rate suggests: $680 on leather; $775 on mesh]

Big news about a little watch from Christopher Ward: the sub-6 mm C5 Malvern 595
By Jim Manley - February 1, 2018

https://wristwatchreview.com/2018/0...christopher-ward-the-sub-6-mm-c5-malvern-595/


brandETA, Peseux
Caliber Number7001
Movement TypeMechanical, manual wind
Lignes10.5”’
Diameter23.3mm
Height2.5mm
Jewels17
Lift Angle50 degrees
Power Reserve~42-45 hours
Vibrations Per Hour21,600 bph, 3Hz
Anti-ShockIncabloc
Hands1.40 / 0.80 / 0.20
Hacking?No
FeaturesHours, minutes, small seconds at 6:00
Country of ManufactureSwitzerland
Known ModelsHolthinrichs Ornament 1, Farer Stanhope, Christopher Ward C5 Malvern 595, NOMOS Tangente, NOMOS Ludwig, Junkers Bauhaus 6030-2, Stowa Antea Klassik KS, Longines Heritage Classic 1930 (Please add yours to comments below…)
The ETA caliber 7001 is a mechanical hand-wound movement with 17 jewels. This movement has been in production since 1971. The most notable attribute of this movement is its ultra slim height of only 2.5mm.

The 7001 is used as the base movement for other vintage calibers including the Peseux Caliber 7040 and Omega caliber 651. Caliber 7001 was also used in NOMOS watches from about 1992 until 2005.

PESEUX
Fabrique d’ebauches de Peseux, S.A. AKA Peseux was an ebauche movement house which was acquired by ETA in 1985. The caliber 7001 was manufactured under the Peseux name from 1971 until 1985. From 1985 until today, the 7001 is still produced by ETA.

https://www.christopherward.com/on/...ault/dwdf10ed0f/pdfs/Dress/c5-malvern-595.pdf

CALIBER SPEC: PESEUX/ETA 7001
AUGUST 31, 2017 WORDS BY MARK MCARTHUR-CHRISTIE

https://wornandwound.com/caliber-spec-peseuxeta-7001/

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A HIGHLY DECORATED 7001 INSIDE A STOWA WATCH

In the beginning, when the world was young and before a chap named Perrelet started work on self-winding movements in 1777, people had to wind their own watches. Imagine! No bumpers or oscillating weights. Batteries, solar power or kinetic would probably have gotten you burned at the stake for watchmaking witchery. Instead, there was just good old-fashioned finger-power. No wonder people were fitter in the old days.

It sometimes feels as though hand-winders have rather dropped out of fashion. But there are plenty of reasons to love a watch that you wind yourself. Thinner movements, fewer parts to go wrong, and no spinning weight to obscure the interesting bits. There’s also the thoughtful interaction of winding your watch each morning, reminding you of the time to come and the time you’ve spent.

The ETA/Peseux 7001 is just such a movement. Simple without being crude, it pops up under case backs from Baume & Mercier to Tissot. Junghans has their own version, the J815, a modified ETA/Peseux 7001. Montblanc calls their 7001 the “MB 23.01.” It even sneaks in with an Omega logo as the cal. 651 in a series of De Villes.

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BLANCPAIN’S CAL. 64-1, A HIGHLY REWORKED 7001. SOURCE

When Ebauches SA absorbed Peseux, they kept the “7001” nomenclature, so you’ll sometimes see the movement referred to as the “ETA/Peseux 7001.”

Pop the case off a watch running a 7001 and you’re struck by how simple the movement looks—particularly as almost everyone nowadays is crowing about their double-tourbillon, equation of time “bling-ographs.” Simple is, often, best. There are just three bridges—one for the escapement, another for the going train and the third for the mainspring and winding mechanism. The movement ticks at a thoroughly respectable 21,600 bph.

In its base form, the 7001 is not exactly pretty—sharp edges to those bridges, no anglage or plating, no stripes. It’s a Ford Pinto of a movement—ugly but effective. In fact, any simpler and you’d be looking to see where to put the coal. That said, the movement takes to decoration quite well, as the many brands that use it can readily prove.

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AN EARLIER, LIGHTLY-DECORATED PESEUX 7001 FROM NOMOS.

This hasn’t stopped makers getting the best use from the movement though. The solidity and simplicity of the 7001 make it a thoroughly modifiable engine—Eberhard used it (heavily tweaked) in their 1997 8 Jours watch. Eberhard’s watchmakers clamped the 7001 to the tuning bench and managed to coax eight days of power reserve from the little engine and even added a power reserve indicator.


A HEAVILY REWORKED (NEARLY UNRECOGNIZABLE) PESEUX 7001. PHOTO CREDIT: SOMETIMEAGO

article continued here


HUDSON
37mm hand-wound watch with sea-blue sunray dial and choice of strap

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1024x524-37MM_HUDSON2_a02e6406-f51b-4c1e-8b8f-78d0740d7228_1024x1024.jpg
1024x524-37MM_HUDSON1_1024x1024.jpg
1024x524-37MM_CROWN_1024x1024.jpg
1024x524-37MM_BACK_1024x1024.jpg


AMBER ORANGE
The inner sub-dial is set into the main dial in deep sea blue. The outer white and scarlet red sub-dial makings are combined with a line of amber orange on the second hand, creating a ‘second look’ colour pop to the dial. The 37mm collection have all been designed with slim rounded index hands finished in polished silver steel and inset with Super-LumiNova strips on both hour and minute hands.


STORY
Named after Henry Hudson, an English sea explorer and navigator during the early 17th century. Born in 1565, he developed a lifelong interest in Arctic exploration through his dangerous explorations of present-day Canada and parts of the northeastern United States. Hudson made three attempts on behalf of English merchants and one on behalf of the Dutch, to find the rumored short route from Europe to Asia through the Arctic Ocean. The Hudson river, strait, and bay in North America are all named after him.

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SPECIFICATIONS
CASE
37mm diameter, 8.3mm depth
MATERIAL
316L high grade stainless steel
FINISH
Polished case, rim and lugs
DIAL
Sunray sea-blue triple stepped dial with baton Super-LumiNova mint hour markers outlined at 45 degrees in pure white, inner sub-dial set into main dial in deep sea blue.
HANDS
Slim rounded index hour/minute hands in polished silver steel, inset with Super-LumiNova strips with sub-dial amber orange hand
CROWN
Onion crown in solid stainless steel, machined bronze inset cap featuring embossed Farer ‘A'
GLASS
Double domed anti-reflective sapphire crystal, exhibition glass on rear
STRAP
Barenia bridle leather, 316L stainless steel buckle fastening
LUG
20mm

WATER RESISTANT
5ATM

37mm_dimensions.jpg


MOVEMENT
Swiss Made ETA 7001 ‘Top Grade’ movement
PRECISION
Three way adjustable with omegamatic timing, average rate of +/-12 seconds/day
FUNCTIONS
Hours, minutes, sub-dial
REGULATOR SYSTEM
ETACHRON and regulator corrector
JEWELS
17
WINDING
Hand-wound
POWER RESERVE
Approximately 42 hours fully wound
37mm_mvmt.jpg


975 Pound sterling equals
1,291.05 United States Dollar
Aug 18, 5:25 PM UTC · Disclaimer

https://farer.com/
 
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The History of Vertex Watches and The Dirty Dozen Story​

WatchGecko
Jul 12, 2023

We had the privilege of interviewing Don Cochrane about Vertex and the Dirty Dozen watches. Don is the great-grandson of Claude Lyons, who started Vertex Watches all the way back in 1912. Don wanted to restart the family business and continue the watchmaking legacy left by his great-grandfather.


0:00 The history of Vertex
5:16 The Only British Dirty Dozen Watchmaker
9:45 Vertex watches and World War 2
12:30 What happened after the war?
16:13 Designing the M100 and re-starting the brand
21:13 The coolest Peli case
23:24 MP45 - mono-pusher chronograph
24:16 M60 - diving watch
27:31 Two lug pin positions
28:17 Brand identity

We discussed the Vertex M100a which is a super high-quality field watch, we reviewed it below


We also looked at the other models - MP45 and M60 and we were genuinely impressed by the quality and presentation of the watches! Vertex seems like a really good value-for-money British watch brand, so stay tuned for our review of the M60.

For all your watch needs check out our website!
https://www.watchgecko.com/

Model Wrist Size: 6.5 inch

LINKS:
Website: https://www.watchgecko.com/
 
:wink:Thanks for adding these, Mike. :hat:
this watch has a very high-end movement ETA 7001 Pesseux hand crank...found in NOMOS @buzzmartian and many high end grails...

I bought this movement on ZELOS NOVA ...captivated by the " story "

still...for me a beast with a lot of NEANDERTHAL DNA i prefer the UNITAS service once every fifty years originally powered POCKET WATCHES...

the ETA 7001 PESSEUX is thinner making it suitable for grails which go to the CORNER OFFICE BOARD ROOM HIGH END RESTAURANT SHOWING OFF IN THE COMMON AMENITY WORK AREA OF YOUR 2 MILLION USD 658 square foot condo converted from EMPTY OFFICE BUILDINGS
 
this watch has a very high-end movement ETA 7001 Pesseux hand crank...found in NOMOS @buzzmartian and many high end grails...

I bought this movement on ZELOS NOVA ...captivated by the " story "

still...for me a beast with a lot of NEANDERTHAL DNA i prefer the UNITAS service once every fifty years originally powered POCKET WATCHES...

the ETA 7001 PESSEUX is thinner making it suitable for grails which go to the CORNER OFFICE BOARD ROOM HIGH END RESTAURANT SHOWING OFF IN THE COMMON AMENITY WORK AREA OF YOUR 2 MILLION USD 658 square foot condo converted from EMPTY OFFICE BUILDINGS
The LJP D100 will be in the NOVA V2. Even back when the 7001 was used in the first version they were hard to source.

THE D100, THE RETURN OF THE ETA-PESEUX 7001​

A cornerstone of the industry, the Peseux 7001 is a small and slim hand-wound movement measuring 23.3mm in diameter and only 2.5mm in height. Often regarded as a classic, it was the base calibre for many other movements, with many independent watchmakers using it as a base for all type of developments. As the movement is no longer supplied and the ébauche stocks are drying up, it is interesting to see a new source for this legendary calibre. If the L100 and G100 are already powering watches today, the D100 is expected for 2023. With the La Joux-Perret D100, the Peseux 7001 comes back with a few tweaks such as a modified click mechanism and with a longer power reserve (50 hours versus 45 hours).



Quick facts: La Joux-Perret D100 – hand-wound movement – 23.3mm diameter, 2.5mm thickness – 21,600 vibrations/hour or 3Hz frequency – 17 jewels – 50h power reserve – hours, minutes, seconds (central or off-centred)
 
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