Jean Lassale

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jean_Lassale an entity of type: Thing

Jean Lassale was a Swiss watch company that designed the Calibre 1200, featuring the thinnest mechanical watch movement: 1.2 mm. In the 1970s, Pierre Mathys, master watchmaker in La Chaux-de-Fonds, designed and built the prototype of a revolutionary watch caliber, with the goal of making the thinnest watch in the world. To achieve this feat, Mathys based his design on the work of Robert Annen, who previously had the idea of using ball bearings in small scale horology. Mathys decided to remove the bridges and counter-pivot, and instead use ball bearings for the axis. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jean Lassale
rdf:langString Jean Lassale
rdf:langString Jean Lassale
xsd:integer 21270319
xsd:integer 1100204729
rdf:langString Bankruptcy
xsd:integer 1976
rdf:langString Watch manufacturing
rdf:langString Jean Bouchet-Lassale, founder; Pierre Mathys, watchmaker
rdf:langString Geneva
rdf:langString Switzerland
rdf:langString Logo Jean Lassale.jpg
xsd:integer 200
rdf:langString Prestige watches
rdf:langString Private
rdf:langString Jean Lassale was a Swiss watch company that designed the Calibre 1200, featuring the thinnest mechanical watch movement: 1.2 mm. In the 1970s, Pierre Mathys, master watchmaker in La Chaux-de-Fonds, designed and built the prototype of a revolutionary watch caliber, with the goal of making the thinnest watch in the world. To achieve this feat, Mathys based his design on the work of Robert Annen, who previously had the idea of using ball bearings in small scale horology. Mathys decided to remove the bridges and counter-pivot, and instead use ball bearings for the axis.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 17342
rdf:langString Bankruptcy
xsd:gYear 1976

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