IWC Aquatimer Ref IW3767 A stainless steel chronograph…
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IWC Aquatimer Ref IW3767 A stainless steel chronograph wristwatch with day and date Dial: deep blue dial, luminescent baton indexes, subsidiary dial for constant seconds, silvered 30 minute and 12 hour registers, luminescent baton hands with orange minute hand. Calibre: automatic, 31 jewels. Case: stainless steel, uni-directional rotating bezel calibrated to 60 minutes with sapphire crystal insert in blue and orange, sapphire crystal, screw down case back and crown. Case: number: 354 8679. Closure: rubber with stainless steel IWC buckle, 44 mm. Signed: case, dial and movement. Accessories: IWC instruction manual, cleaning cloth and presentation box

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  • Subsidiary Dial - On a clock or watch, a subsidiary dial, also called an auxiliary dial, is a dial that is secondary to the main dial and may show seconds, day of the week or month, or strike silent. A subsidiary dial may be within our outside the main dial, and a clock or watch may have several subsidiary dials.
  • 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.
  • Baton Hands - A narrow hand on a watch, sometimes also called a stick hand.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.

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