Patek Philippe. A very fine and extremely rare platinum self-winding minute repeating wristwatch
Patek Philippe. A very fine and extremely rare platinum self-winding minute repeating wristwatch

SIGNED PATEK PHILIPPE, GENEVE, REF. 3979H, MOVEMENT 1'904'051, CASE NO. 2'947'058, MANUFACTURED IN 1994

Details
Patek Philippe. A very fine and extremely rare platinum self-winding minute repeating wristwatch
Signed Patek Philippe, Geneve, ref. 3979H, movement 1'904'051, case no. 2'947'058, manufactured in 1994
Cal. R 27 PS nickel-finished lever movement stamped with the Geneva seal, 39 jewels, Gyromax balance, free sprung regulator, engine-turned 22K gold micro-rotor, repeating on two polished steel hammers onto two gongs, the porcelain-white dial with Roman numerals, subsidiary seconds, in circular case with repeating slide in the band, glazed snap on back, downturned lugs, platinum Patek Philippe buckle, case, dial and movement signed
33 mm. diam.

Lot Essay

Accompanied by Patek Philippe Extract from the Archives confirming production of the present watch in 1994 and its subsequent sale on 22 July 1994. It has never been offered in public before.

The present watch is only the second example of a reference 3979 in platinum known to exist and also to appear in public to date. It has most probably been made by special order for one of Patek Philippe's it prestigious clients.

Manufacture of reference 3979, the legitimate successor of ref. 2524/1, was launched in 1989 with movement number 1'904'000, the vast majority cased in yellow gold. The model is not in production anymore.

It is fitted with the ingenious calibre R 27 PS which impresses not only by its remarkable number of 342 parts but also by Patek Philippe's masterly performance of combining a micro-rotor and a minute repeating mechanism in a proportionally small 12 1/2''' movement.

It is furthermore incorporating a "Cathedral" repeating mechanism of this watch consisting of a high-tone and a low-tone gong. When the repeating is activated, first the number of hours are stroke by means of one of the two hammers on the low-tone gong, followed by the quarter hours with double strikes on both the low-tone and the high-tone gong, and finally the number of minutes which have elapsed since the last quarter-hour with one hammer on the high-tone gong.

The length of the gong in a standard repeating mechanism corresponds to almost precisely one turn in the movement whereas those of the "Cathedral" mechanism exceed the case circumference by at least one and a half, even two turns. Consequently, a much richer and fuller timbre is achieved.

Reference 3979 illustrated in Patek Philippe Wristwatches by Martin Huber & Alan Banbery, second edition, p. 320.

More from Important Pocketwatches and Wristwatches

View All
View All