Saturday, June 27, 2015

ARNOLD & SON – Instrument Sir John Franklin Set Limited Edition



ARNOLD & SON Instrument Sir John Franklin Set 18-Carat Gold Limited Edition NEW

Instrument Collection
Sir John Franklin Set


A gripping tale and the mystery of the Arnold marine chronometer:
Arnold & Son unveils the Sir John Franklin Set of three fabulous
timepieces

The three watches in the John Franklin Set are the latest additions to the Instrument Collection and take as their subject three famous paintings from London’s National Maritime Museum. The timepieces, which feature a true-beat seconds and off-centre hour and minute hands, each depict an episode in the life of HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, vessels that eventually perished in the course of Sir John Franklin’s ill-fated expedition to discover the North-West Passage in the mid-19th century.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO


























Sir John Franklin Set
Arnold & Son manufacture movement A&S6103, self-winding,
hand-finished miniature, mother-of-pearl dial, 18-carat rose gold case, diameter 44 mm
© Arnold & Son
 
To the British government, the North-West Passage had long been an obsession. It represented a shorter route to the Indies that would eliminate the need for rounding Cape Horn and avoid meetings with the hostile fleets of other European nations.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO












 
 Sir John Franklin

And although its mythical status as a faster route to the East had evaporated by the mid-19th century, it was still one of the last uncharted coastlines of the world. In 1845, Sir John Franklin set out on his third expedition to the area in HMS Erebus, accompanied by HMS Terror. After being sighted by whalers in mid-summer, the two ships disappeared. Over forty expeditions set out to locate and rescue them but found only remnants of the expedition.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO







































The mother-of-pearl dials of the three models in the Sir John Franklin Set each feature an exquisite, hand-finished miniature reproduction of an original oil painting owned by the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, London. The first, “Friendly Encounter”, shows HMS Erebus and HMS Terror in New Zealand in about 1840, when the crew had a series of peaceful meetings with the local Maori population.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO






































In the second, “Antarctic Adventure”, we see the two vessels navigating storm-tossed seas in the inhospitable environment at the southern tip of the world.

 Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO




















 The third, “North-West Passage”, depicts HMS Erebus surrounded by icebergs but still in open water.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO




































 

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO




















We know now that both ships were subsequently trapped by the ice and abandoned by their crews, who perished. A later expedition established that Sir John Franklin died on 11 June 1847.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO




















torontopubliclibrary.typepad.com

For his third and final expedition to the waters north of Canada, Sir John Franklin had with him a marine chronometer made by John Roger Arnold in around 1815 with an eight-day movement, Arnold spring detent escapement and balance. As later became clear, it was one of several items recovered during searches for the Franklin expedition but was not handed over to the authorities. Only more than a century later did it reappear on the market, when it was purchased by the Friends of the National Maritime Museum.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO























Arnold marine chronometer from Franklin’s North-West
passage expedition 
John  Roger  Arnold,  marine chronometer, 
8-day movement, spring-detent escapement and
later balance, London, 1815

© National Maritime Museum,
Greenwich, UK

It was immediately clear that Arnold’s marine chronometer had been modified while missing and converted into a travelling timepiece. It was still mounted in the original bowl, to which a handle and four feet had been added. The engraved, silver-plated brass dial showed signs of alteration to the signature around the name ‘Arnold’.

Click on the mouse wheel to see the large size ...                 BIG FOTO



















A&S6103 movement
© Arnold & Son

The three references in the Sir John Franklin Set are fitted with the A&S6103 automatic movement developed, designed and manufactured in-house at the Arnold & Son workshops in La Chaux de Fonds. The A&S6103 movement is rhodium treated with classic Haute Horlogerie finishing that includes hand-chamfered bridges and polished edges, fine circular-graining and Côtes de Genève rayonnantes, a brushed and skeletonised rotor and blued screws. It is housed in an 18-carat rose gold case measuring 44 millimetres in diameter

The magnificent Sir John Franklin Set of three timepieces is destined to become a much sought after collector’s item and is a limited edition of 28 sets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Technical Characteristics

Model: Instrument Collection - Sir John Franklin Set

References: 1ARAP.M08A.C120P, Sir John Franklin Set – Friendly Encounter
References: 1ARAP.M07A.C120P, Sir John Franklin Set – Antarctic Adventure
References: 1ARAP.M06A.C120P, Sir John Franklin Set – North-West Passage

Calibre:                                  
A&S6103
Arnold & Son manufacture movement, self-winding,
ceramic ball bearing, 30 jewels,
diameter 30.4 mm, thickness 7.79 mm,
power reserve 50 h,
28,800 vibrations/h, stop second device
Functions:
Hours, minutes, true beat seconds
Movement decoration:
Rhodium treated with Haute Horlogerie finishing:
Hhand-chamfered bridges with polished edges,
fine circular graining and Côtes deGenève rayonnantes,
brushed and skeletonised oscillating weight,
blued screws with bevelled and mirror-polished heads.
Dial:
Hand-finished miniature, mother-of-pearl 
Case:   
18-carat rose gold, diameter 44 mm,
cambered sapphire with antireflective coating on both sides,
see-through sapphire case back
Water-resistant to 30 m
Strap: 
Hand-stitched brown alligator leather

Limited edition: 28 of 3 timepieces
-----------------------------------------
libweb5.princeton.edu
wikipedia.org
www.thehistoryblog.com
--------------------------------------------------
Marketing & Sales
Boulevard des Eplatures 38
CH – 2300 La Chaux-de-Fonds
Switzerland
info@arnoldandson.com
---------------------------------------------------
 www.ArnoldandSon.com - Media
--------------------------------------------------------------------
www.Arnold&Son.com