A10164

Two Day Marine Chronometer by Kullberg

£5,750.00

Signed  Victor Kullberg 105 Liverpool Rd London N. - Makers to the Admiralty, The Indian & Italian Governments.
Circa   1910
An early 20th Century English two day marine chronometer by Kullberg in a mahogany box.
Diameter [dial]   100 mm         

Out of stock

Description

An early 20th Century English two day marine chronometer by Kullberg in a mahogany box.  Full plate spotted keywind reverse fusee movement, four turned pillars secured by blue steel screws.  Harrison's maintaining power with steel click and blue steel spring. Polished steel barrel ratchet wheel and double toothed click on the spotted barrel bridge.  Spotted cock with diamond endstone.  Auxiliary compensation to the two arm compensation balance with two circular weights, small timing screws and large timing nuts, freesprung invar helical hairspring.  Earnshaw spring detent escapement, escape pivots with endstones.  The movement secured to the gilt dial plate by three blue steel screws.  Engraved signed and numbered silvered brass dial with broad ministry arrow above “I”, details of medals awarded and countries supplied.  Subsidiaries for seconds and power reserve indication, Roman numerals, blue steel hands.  Turned brass bowl, rotating shutter to the winding hole, screw brass bezel with flat glass.  Brass gimbals and locking mechanism, brass ratchet key.  Three tier mahogany box, hinged flush brass handles replaced, top lid.  Signed, numbered and dated rectangular bone plaque.

Ordered by the Indian Government and supplied in 1910 this chronometer is fitted with Auxiliary compensation to the balance.  Victor Kullberg was born in Sweden in 1824 and moved to London in 1851 where he established a business making fine watches and chronometers. In addition to selling under his own name he also supplied to many English retailers.  He almost always used the fusee in a reverse configuration to reduce friction and wear on the arbors.  He experimented with balances on his chronometers patenting flat rim varieties.  His chronometers won many medals for their timekeeping in the later half of the 19th Century.  The firm continued making chronometers after his death in 1890