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Accutron Legacy 'Stadium TV'
Accutron Legacy 'Stadium TV'
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$ 89.60

$ 68.92

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“Are you ready? Because I want you to pay attention. This is the beginning of something.”

So opens Season 7 of AMC's Mad Men, with Sterling Cooper copywriter Freddie Rumsen pitching the new Accutron watch from Bulova. “Accutron,” he intones. “It’s not a timepiece — it’s a conversation piece."

In 1960, this thought-provoking electronic watch offered state of the art technology and design. But in order to fully understand its significance, we need to turn back the proverbial clock for a moment — all the way back to 1875. Nearly 150 years ago, Joseph Bulova established a small jewelry shop in Queens, no doubt unaware of its vast potential. In 1912, the firm opened a movement manufacture in Biel, Switzerland, carting over American mass-production methods. Within a few decades, Bulova had grown into one of the most important watchmaking manufactures in the United States.

By the 1950s, progress was being made within the realm of electronic watches as an alternative to traditional mechanical watchmaking. But it was the Bulova Accutron that brought a degree of hitherto unheard-of accuracy and robustness to the scene in 1960. Its tuning fork oscillator, beating at a consistent 360 Hz, swept a seconds hand smoothly around the dial periphery, while a dry cell battery provided a constant flow of power via an electromagnetic coil. This technology, developed by Swiss engineer Max Hetzel, was inspired by a tuning-fork clock built in the 19th century by Abraham-Louis Breguet, grandson of perhaps the most important watchmaker in history.

The Accutron — especially in its futuristic, transparent Spaceview guise — quickly found its way onto the wrists of test pilots, astronauts, and everyday people searching for a reliable, handsome timepiece. And though its movement technology would later be eclipsed by more inexpensive, quartz-powered systems, its legacy has endured all the way into the 21st century. In 2020, Accutron was spun off from Bulova into its own distinct entity, charged with the caretaking of a legendary development that has come to define horological ingenuity in the 20th century. 

Beyond the debut of their brand-new Spaceview 2020 and Accutron DNA models, Accutron also reached into their back catalog of magical mid-century designs, and thus, the Legacy Collection was born. The Accutron Legacy Collection is a modern re-imagining of the brand's most memorable pieces from the 1960s and 1970s. Using mechanical movements as a nod to their roots in traditional watchmaking, these timepieces were directly inspired from their original briefs and have captured the hearts of enthusiasts today. The blend of mid-century styling and mechanical internals perfectly represent the ebb and flow of technology and design.

Accutron had become synonymous for the unique case shapes inspired by the futuristic designs of TVs and other household appliances at the time á la The Jetsons. While some models fully leaned into the concept, others tended to be a bit more conservative in their design approach. But no matter how you slice it, these timepieces are exactly what's hot right now when you consider the rising trend of irregular shaped, avant-garde watches.

This piece is a modern re-imagining of the original Reference 21343-9W and features all of its classic hallmarks — a 38mm stainless steel case with a vertically brushed bezel, a flat sapphire crystal, a signed 'tuning fork' crown, and a matching multi-link stainless steel bracelet with a push-button deployant clasp.

Offering incredible visual depth, the dial features a deep rehaut that houses a set of applied hour indices and a date indicator, all of which, culminates at a brushed silver base. With its unique dial presentation, we can't help but notice how this piece resembles a miniature stadium on the wrist. Hence the 'Stadium TV' moniker!

Likely to stand out in a world filled with Plain Jane steel sport watches, this Legacy Edition piece has all the 70s funk — with a capital F. U. N. K. — you'll ever need!

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