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2 minute read
RAKETA “BAIKONOUR” SPACE WATCH
RAKETA
“BAIKONOUR”
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A SPACE WATCH DESIGNED BY LEGENDARY COSMAUNAUT SERGEI KRIKALEV
60 years ago, on 12 April 1961, the first ever manned spaceflight by the Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was such a groundbreaking event for humanity, that the Soviet Union felt the need to dedicate a brand in its honour: it created the watch brand “Raketa” which means “space rocket” in Russian. Since then, the Raketa Watch Factory accompanied every step of the space conquest by engineering watches for Soviet cosmonauts. Today, 60 years later, Raketa continues this tradition with Russian cosmonauts. The Raketa “Baikonur” model is a specialized watch for cosmonauts developed in 2016 with the cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev.
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The Raketa movement in the ”Baikonur” watch has another important feature that makes it even more robust. “Buckle up” to understand it: when you wear the watch in the space station, its automatic winding system will obviously not work properly in the absence of gravity, and you will therefore need to regularly wind it up manually. In most other automatic watches, this would lead to a quick wearing out of the tiny little wheels in the automatic winding module (because they would be turning to no purpose every time you would wind-up the movement manually). The Raketa automatic movement includes a very special system that disengages these little wheels when you wind-up the movement manually, thus avoiding their premature use while the watch is in space. As a result, the automatic winding system will work perfectly well when you land back on Earth after a long stay in space!
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In addition to enabling you to distinguish night from day, the 24 hour dial provides another really cool function: it can serve on Earth as a solar compass. This is why the rotating bezel of the Baikonur watch has markers indicating the 4 cardinal points (in Russian) and the 360 degrees as in a normal compass. This solar compass would be very useful if your “Soyuz” descent module should fail to land at the right spot in the deep taiga forest and you would need a compass to find your way back to civilization
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The Raketa movement has a beautifully printed decoration that you can see through the open caseback: a cosmonaut flies in open space in the middle of celestial constellations and the famous words pronounced by Gagirin (when he flew to space) is printed in Russian on the oscillating weight - meaning en English “Let's go!”.
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Raketa is one of the very few watchmaking companies to master the art of making from scratch hairsprings and escapements, made in a secret alloy.
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David Henderson-Stewart, CEO of Raketa
Complimentary distribution in selected airlines
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