A fine and rare example of theOmega Speedsonic F300hz reference 188.0002.
Hailing from circa 1973, the Omega SpeedsonicF300hz was launched amid the quartz crisis of the '70s. In an effort to remain relevant Swiss brands poured millions into R&D for electronic technology.
One such result was the introduction of thetuning fork movement. In1972 ETA released the 9210 (regarded by some as the Rolls Royce of tuning fork movements), they would go onto produce just 21,000 examples. Omega were one such customer for the 9210 and like many manufactures, they assigned their own reference to the movement - the Omega 1250 (date only) and 1255 (chronograph with a day/date). The 300hz you can see on the dial relates to the frequency (300Hz) at which the movement vibrates.
Unfortunately, as quartz technology continued to fall in price, production of movements such as the 9210 would no longer be economically viable andthe movement slowly slipped into the history books.
This particular example of theOmega Speedsonic F300hzis in excellent condition. The movement has recently received a full service and works well. It appears the nameplate on the movement was replaced with one from a during a previous service. The case and dial are both in excellent conditionas is the reference1198 bracelet. It also comes with an Omega inner and outer box, although the inner box suffers from significant wear.
In summary, this attractive and historically significantOmega Speedsonic F300h is not only an attractive watch but is likely to be a good investment in the years to come as examples in this condition become increasingly hard to find.