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Seiko Quartz Wristwatch

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    manufacturer

    Seiko Corporation

    Description

    The Seiko Quartz Astron 35 SQ was the first quartz wristwatch on the market. The first commercially available quartz watch went on sale in Tokyo on Christmas Day in 1969. With a limited production run of only about 100 pieces, these watches had analog dials and sold for 450,000 yen ($1250), roughly the same price as a Toyota Corolla. The watches were manufactured in Suwa City, Japan, by the firm Suwa Seikosha (now Seiko Epson) and were marketed by the parent company K. Hattori & Co., Ltd.
    The case and band on the Smithsonian example are a reproduction of those that originally came with Seiko’s 1969 wristwatch. Inside is an original module that contains a hybrid circuit (a combination of circuits on a single substrate, an intermediate step between discrete circuits and integrated circuits), a quartz oscillator with a frequency of 8,192 cycles per second and a miniature stepping motor for moving the hands. Seiko claimed the new watches were accurate to within plus or minus 5 seconds a month, a minute a year.
    At the time of the Astron’s introduction, Seiko produced more mechanical watches than any other firm in the world. But company officials had been experimenting with quartz timekeeping since the late 1950s. Beginning in 1959, a team of engineers, under Tsuneya Nakamura, started to develop a quartz wristwatch. Their first quartz timekeepers were battery-powered chronometers, one of which was used in the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 1964. By 1967, Seiko engineers had miniaturized the timekeeper to produce a wristwatch prototype. To develop manufacturing techniques required another two years.
    The Astron was the first public indicator that the wristwatch was about to be completely reinvented, with all-new electronic components. When battery-driven quartz wristwatches like the Astron first hit the market, it seemed unlikely that the new-fangled gadgets would sell. But electronic watches won over the buying public in a few short years.
    Reference:
    Stephens, Carlene and Maggie Dennis. “Engineering Time: Inventing the Electronic Wristwatch,” British Journal for the History of Science 33 (2000): pp. 477-497.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Seiko Corporation of America

    date made

    1969
    1998

    ID Number

    1998.0248.01

    catalog number

    1998.0248.01

    accession number

    1998.0248

    Object Name

    wristwatch, first quartz analog watch

    Measurements

    overall - watch: 9 1/8 in x 1 5/8 in x 1/2 in; 23.1775 cm x 4.1275 cm x 1.27 cm
    overall - case: 3 in x 5 in x 5 in; 7.62 cm x 12.7 cm x 12.7 cm

    place made

    Japan

    See more items in

    Work and Industry: Mechanisms
    Time and Navigation
    Measuring & Mapping

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746aa-74ac-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_1204788

    Discover More

    Watches

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