Tudor. A stainless steel automatic chronograph wristwatch with date registers and bracelet ref 70330B case J828703 Heritage circa 2014, automatic winding movement, fully jewelled, grey matte dial, luminous baton numerals, luminous hands, orange hand for chronographic seconds, outer orange Arabic five minute divisions on blue track, two blue sunken subsidiary dials for constant seconds and 45-minute register, aperture for date, tonneau-shaped water-resistant-type case, revolving blue bezel calibrated for 12 hours, screw-down crown, two round screw-down chronograph buttons in the band, screw back, case, dial and movement signed, with a stainless steel Tudor Oyster link bracelet and folding clasp, diameter 42 mm, bracelet circumference approximately 170 mm. Accompanied by a Tudor guarantee, booklets, tag, J Farren-Price invoice and presentation case.
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- Baton Numerals - A watch that instead of displaying numerals on the face, displays a marker in the form of a baton, or lower case letter "L". Since the baton-like marks are not numerals, the feature is also called baton markers, baton indexes and baton indicators.
- Chronograph - A chronograph is a watch that also incorporates the features of a stopwatch, to measure elapsed time. Most chronographs are operated by two buttons, one to start and stop the chronograph second hand, and the other to return that hand to the starting position.
- Bezel - On a clock or watch, the bezel is the metal frame into which the watch or clock glass is fitted. In clocks, the bezel may include a hinge and a flange, in effect a door to the face of the clock. In jewellery the bezel is a band of metal with a projecting lip that holds the gemstone in its setting.
- Movement - The technical name for the workings of a clock or watch, and does not include the dial or case.
- Date Aperture - A date aperture is a cut out section in the face of a watch or clock, displaying the day of the month.
- Circa - A Latin term meaning 'about', often used in the antique trade to give an approximate date for the piece, usually considered to be five years on either side of the circa year. Thus, circa 1900 means the piece was made about 1900, probably between 1895 and 1905. The expression is sometimes abbreviated to c.1900.
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