Brand | Omega |
---|---|
Model | |
Reference | 2914 |
Year of production (circa) | 1961 |
Material | Steel |
Crystal | Acrylic |
Dial color | Black |
Movement | Hand-wound |
Diameter | 38 mm |
Bracelet/strap: | Leather |
Buckle/clasp | Aftermarket steel |
Lug Width | 19 mm |
Set Content | Extract of archives |
Omega Railmaster Ref. 2914-6 Lollipop
1957 Was a big year for Omega. They introduced the Speedmaster, the Seamaster in its diving guise and this Railmaster CK2914.
Watches for scientists may sound a bit niche, but there was actually some fierce competition in the field. IWC had its Ingenieur, Rolex had its Milgauss. Omega introduced the Railmaster, with its own soft iron Farraday cage protecting the movement. It was aimed at both scientists working with magnetic fields as well as train-drivers, lending it the name Railmaster.
Interestingly, the watch wasn’t a great commercial success. Omega killed the range in 1963, meaning it was made for a mere six years. This lovely example is from 1961. A re-introduction of the watch is in Omega’s current line-up, by the way.
The Railmaster measures a modern-feeling 38mm in diameter. It is fitted with a beautiful matte black dial with radium indices and hands. The distinct features such as the “Railmaster” text and white lollipop seconds-hand complete a very, very attractive design. This is one of the more collectible vintage Omega’s in today’s market. Not a watch you see in this great condition too often!
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Omega was founded in La chaux-de-fonds by Louis Brandt in 1848, although the company would not be named Omega until 1903. It is one of the most successful Swiss watch houses, both in terms of sales and historical significance.
Louis Brandt was already rather innovative before his Omega days. He developed the very first minute-repeater wristwatch with Audemars Piguet in 1892. Although Brandt died in 1903, Omega would not lose its innovative nature. Among its biggest accomplishments are the manufacture of the first tourbillon wristwatch movement in 1947 and the first large-scale commercial implementation of George Daniels’ co-axial escapement in 1999.
The biggest highlight in Omega’s history is undoubtedly the moon landing in 1969. Both Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin wore Omega Speedmasters on the lunar surface. But there is so much more to this Swiss powerhouse. They launched the very first dive watch with the Omega Marine, all the way back in 1932. That is some twenty years before the Blancpain Fifty-Fathoms and Rolex Submariner would redefine the category.
Omega has no shortage of hit collections. From the Speedmaster to the Seamaster and from the Constellation to the De Ville, with tons and tons of variations within all of those lines. You may opt for a yellow gold pie-pan Constellation or for a chunky Ploprof. There is something for everyone.
And that is before we go into Omega’s military history, including the Dirty dozen MOD-issued field watch. And we cannot forget James Bond, with his tricked out Seamasters since 1995’s Goldeneye.
No wonder then, that we love Omega so much!
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