Rolex designs and manufactures all of its own movements in-house, certified as Superlative Chronometers to tight accuracy tolerances.
01Specifications
02What these specifications mean
Frequency is how fast the balance wheel swings, counted in vibrations per hour (vph) or in hertz (Hz), where one hertz equals two vibrations. A higher frequency means the escapement divides time into finer slices, so the watch tends to keep a more stable rate and resists small shocks better. It also means the tick the timegrapher hears arrives more often, which the analysis uses to lock onto the beat.
The lift angle is the arc, in degrees, that the balance wheel travels while the pallet fork is engaged and pushing it. A timegrapher cannot see the balance directly; it only hears the tick, so it must be told the lift angle to convert the timing of those ticks into an amplitude reading. Enter the wrong lift angle and the rate stays correct but the amplitude figure is off by several degrees.
The power reserve is how long the movement runs from a full wind until it stops. As the mainspring unwinds its torque falls, amplitude drops and the rate usually drifts, which is why a watch can read differently at full wind versus near the end of its reserve.
03Measuring this caliber with WatchScope
The lift angle of this caliber is not officially published, so use 52° as a safe default in WatchScope before you start. Rest the watch against the phone microphone in a quiet room, pick a position and let the reading settle for a few seconds. The rate will be accurate either way; only the amplitude figure depends on the lift angle, so refine it if the maker later confirms a value.
Frequently asked questions
What frequency does the Rolex 3235 run at?
The Rolex 3235 beats at 28,800 vph, that is 4 Hz.
What is the power reserve of the Rolex 3235?
The Rolex 3235 has a power reserve of about 70 hours when fully wound.
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