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23 December 2008, 03:33 PM | #1 |
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Air King History
Does anyone have a link to its history? I assume it was designed for airplane pilots?
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23 December 2008, 04:43 PM | #2 |
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Here you go, from Mr Rolex himself;
After WWII, Rolex revised the whole of their range after the introduction of the Datejust as their new top of the line model. Several new models were introduced and many others were renamed, the Oyster Royal remained as the most expensive manual wind model, but now that the Perpetual was well established it no longer was a top of the line watch. Before WWII, Rolex had always been the favourite watch of long distance flyers and the fact that it had become the watch of choice for Battle of Britain fighter pilots made an impression on Hans Wilsdorf. He chose to honour these flyers with a new line of manual wind Oysters; they were new because (like the new Datejust) they were much larger than the previous manual wind watches, in order to fit in with the new look. In fact we would now consider them quite small, they were 32 to 33mm diameter. The new range of watches bore the names “Air Tiger”, “Air Lion”; Air Giant” and “Air King”; they all used the legendary 10.5 hunter manual wind movement with 15 jewels and no shock protection on the balance staff. The Air Giant was the largest of the 4 watches and like the rest, was available in steel, steel & gold or low carat (9 or10k depending on the market) gold. These watches remained in production from about 1948 to the early 1950s but never really proved popular and were dropped from the catalogues. Only the Air King remained and that gained an automatic movement. Since then the Air King has kept its place in the Rolex catalogue as the least expensive gent’s Oyster Perpetual. Nowadays it is only available in stainless steel, but up to the late 60s it was available in low carat gold, steel & gold and in a gold filled top steel back configuration. |
24 December 2008, 03:57 AM | #3 |
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I love the AK, what a great history!
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24 December 2008, 04:26 AM | #4 | |
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Quote:
The Air King is a classic and the one of the longest continuously produced models in the whole Rolex line Air-King models though the years. 4365,4499, 4925, 5500, 5501, 5506, 5520, 6500, 6552, 7784, 14000, 14000M, 14010, 14010M
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ICom Pro3 All posts are my own opinion and my opinion only. "The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop. Now is the only time you actually own the time, Place no faith in time, for the clock may soon be still for ever." Good Judgement comes from experience,experience comes from Bad Judgement,.Buy quality, cry once; buy cheap, cry again and again. www.mc0yad.club Second in command CEO and left handed watch winder |
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1 February 2009, 10:43 PM | #5 | |
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Time Line for Air King Date
Quote:
I inherited my fathers Air King date The dial says Air King Oyster Perpetual Super Precision, it has a Date model 5700. I have the receipt 1959 bought in Sheffield UK. must say never seen one like it having spent many years trawling the net the dial seems very unique (Ivory, elongated SS diamond markers and Space ship looking 6 and 9 markers) . |
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24 December 2008, 05:32 AM | #6 |
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Nice info thank you guys!! This watch has an amazing history!!
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24 December 2008, 07:57 AM | #7 |
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It's amazing to think the Air King was considered a large watch for its day. Folks nowadays see the Air King as very small watch. Wow, will our grandchildren be wearing 50mm watches?! Thanks for the information!
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24 December 2008, 09:15 AM | #8 |
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Great thread, thanks everyone.
Cheers, Chris
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16610 LV F serial, 16600 K serial, 16622 F serial, 116710 BLNR, 116400 GV, Air King ca. 1988, et al. |
24 December 2008, 09:21 AM | #9 |
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agreed this was very informative! thanks all
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24 December 2008, 10:55 AM | #10 |
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Excellent..... very interesting.... Tx all. :-)
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24 December 2008, 12:35 PM | #11 |
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Being a first time Rolex owner with an Air King on my wrist, I found that very informative.
Thanks
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Air King - Black Bay 58 - PAM 111 |
7 February 2009, 08:13 AM | #12 |
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Hi
My lovely wife ha just treated me to an Air King for my forthciming 50th birthday. I chose the AK becaue of its clean, classic, understated class. Not even the 'cyclops' magnifier of the datejust to spoil its perfect form. ok its a wee bit smaller than the Datejust but its a watch that doesn't scream "look at me" and that speaks volumes about the wearer IMHO! |
7 February 2009, 11:40 AM | #13 |
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It's always nice to have a history behind the watch since it makes ownership that much more meaningful.
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7 February 2009, 01:23 PM | #14 |
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I handled a very nice new Z-serial pink faced with WG arabic numerals Air King today.
It had the Precision movement. With the older clasp, bracelet, and watch body, it also came with the older list price. Can anyone chime in with their preference for the pinkish rose face on a Rolex? |
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