omega rattrapante speedmaster production | Speedy Tuesday – Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante omega rattrapante speedmaster production This Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante was – like written in the introduction – only in production for a very short period and in limited numbers. Introduced in 1999 and officially produced till 2001/2002. The 14 year-old single malt is bottled at 40% ABV and probably includes added color and is also probably chill filtered. You can’t win them all. Nose: Rich, nutty, and with a distinct brandy note. Not at all shy, but also not particularly complex.
0 · Speedy Tuesday – Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante
1 · Speedy Tuesday
$29.98
This Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante was – like written in the introduction – only in production for a very short period and in limited . Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante 3540.50 (image by WatchFinder.co.uk) The movement, Omega caliber 3600, was based on the ETA/Valjoux 7750 movement and of course modified to become a split-second chronograph. This Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante was – like written in the introduction – only in production for a very short period and in limited numbers. Introduced in 1999 and officially produced till 2001/2002. It was the Omega Speedmaster Chronometer Split Seconds (Rattrapante) officially known as the 3540.50. Supposedly only 5000 of this watches were made in 3 different dial color variations starting in 1999, Carbon fiber, Silver and Blue (limited to the Italian market - go figure).
Measuring 42mm across and quite thick (16.1mm per the specs we tracked down), the piece wears about as hefty as modern 44.25mm Co-Axial Speedmaster models. Looking at its inner workings, its Omega caliber 3600 movement is quite similar to the split-seconds offered by IWC in the same period. In 1999, Omega released the limited edition Speedmaster Automatic Chronometer Rattrapante. This watch was COSC certified (one of a handful of Speedys to achieve COSC certification) and water resistant to 100 meters. 5000 total pieces were produced with either a carbon fiber dial (ref. 3840.50) or blue dial (ref. 3840.80). I didn't know until yesterday that Omega made a rattrapante (X-33 type case with modified 7750) and the more I look at it, the more I like it. On reading further, there's also a "split seconds" that was produced in both the DeVille and Speedmaster lines but I always thought these terms were interchangeable.For a standard 150g timepiece, this sudden and rapid acceleration is an equivalent force of up to 5,000 G on the watch head. Discover the Speedmaster 44.25 mm, steel on steel Watch - 3582.51.00!
In this episode of #TalkingTimepieces we take a close look inside and out of the #Omega #Speedmaster #Rattrapante, a double #chronograph and a very cool tool #watch. In this #TalkingTImepieces short, we show how the #Omega #Speedmaster #Rattrapante #Doublechronograph in operation. The case diameter of this Speedmaster Rattrapante ref. 3582.51.00 is 44.25mm which equals to the current Speedmaster Co-Axial 9300 watches (including the Dark Side of the Moon). Although this model is out of production for almost 5 years now, you will occasionally find them in the pre-owned market. Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante 3540.50 (image by WatchFinder.co.uk) The movement, Omega caliber 3600, was based on the ETA/Valjoux 7750 movement and of course modified to become a split-second chronograph.
This Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante was – like written in the introduction – only in production for a very short period and in limited numbers. Introduced in 1999 and officially produced till 2001/2002. It was the Omega Speedmaster Chronometer Split Seconds (Rattrapante) officially known as the 3540.50. Supposedly only 5000 of this watches were made in 3 different dial color variations starting in 1999, Carbon fiber, Silver and Blue (limited to the Italian market - go figure). Measuring 42mm across and quite thick (16.1mm per the specs we tracked down), the piece wears about as hefty as modern 44.25mm Co-Axial Speedmaster models. Looking at its inner workings, its Omega caliber 3600 movement is quite similar to the split-seconds offered by IWC in the same period.
In 1999, Omega released the limited edition Speedmaster Automatic Chronometer Rattrapante. This watch was COSC certified (one of a handful of Speedys to achieve COSC certification) and water resistant to 100 meters. 5000 total pieces were produced with either a carbon fiber dial (ref. 3840.50) or blue dial (ref. 3840.80).
Speedy Tuesday – Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante
I didn't know until yesterday that Omega made a rattrapante (X-33 type case with modified 7750) and the more I look at it, the more I like it. On reading further, there's also a "split seconds" that was produced in both the DeVille and Speedmaster lines but I always thought these terms were interchangeable.For a standard 150g timepiece, this sudden and rapid acceleration is an equivalent force of up to 5,000 G on the watch head. Discover the Speedmaster 44.25 mm, steel on steel Watch - 3582.51.00! In this episode of #TalkingTimepieces we take a close look inside and out of the #Omega #Speedmaster #Rattrapante, a double #chronograph and a very cool tool #watch.
In this #TalkingTImepieces short, we show how the #Omega #Speedmaster #Rattrapante #Doublechronograph in operation.
Speedy Tuesday
$4.88
omega rattrapante speedmaster production|Speedy Tuesday – Omega Speedmaster Rattrapante