The following are antique and vintage pocket watch movements.
Movements with interesting technical characteristics
- Antique marine chronometre with detent escapement (rusty and went through a fire)
- Antique pocket watch movement with verge escapement (and fusée and chain)
- EDE 16s (with cylinder escapement)
- George Oram & Son 8947 (fusée and chain, key setting and winding, English escapement)
- Unknown 12s (with cylinder escapement)
- Vintage stop watch (chronograph function, but not display of time)
- Wilka ultra-thin (3mm thick)
Railroad grade American movements
The design of these movements is very traditional, but it is the finishing that sets them apart.
- Elgin Father Time Grade 388 (from 1918, Railroad grade)
- Hamilton 992 (from 1926, Railroad grade)
- Illinois Model 9 Bunn Special (from 1917, Railroad grade)
- Waltham American Grade (from 1872, Railroad grade)
- Waltham Vanguard Model 1899 (from 1907, Railroad grade)
Other movements
- Debon 12s (classic, no special features)
- Elgin Model 3 Grade 304 (size 12s from 1904)
- Elgin Model 3 Grade 345 (size 12s from 1914)
- Elgin/Sun Dial Model 5 Grade 179 (size 18s from 1898, full plate)
- Elgin Model 7 Grade 594 (size 16s from 1943 with setting lever)
- Hampden 3/0s (small pocket watch movement with lever setting mechanism)
- Ingersoll Reliance 1677 (size 16s, 3/4 plate)
- Jaeger-Lecoultre 467/2 (45.6mm movement from the 1940s)
- Longines 15.93 (small 33mm movement)
- New England 16s (3/4 plate with “fake” bridges)
- Progress 6s (3/4 plate and setting lever)
- Standard NY 18s (3/4 plate)
- Trenton 6s (lever set)
- Waltham Colonial Grade 1420 (from 1919)
- Waltham Equity 16s (from 1917)
Stopwatch
- Junghans 628 stopwatch (interesting seconds hand)
Clocks
- Swiza mechanical alarm clock (pillar construction)