Jaeger-LeCoultre Atmos Clock
Jaeger-LeCoultre, 1970s
Swiss Jaeger-LeCoultre Gold Plated 'Classique' Atmos Clock. The torsion pendulum clock powered by changes in atmospheric pressure and temperature. The Atmos clock was invented by Jean-Leon Reutter in the late 1920's. The design for the movement is extremely innovative, with slight changes in atmospheric pressure winding it for days. After a chance encounter between Reutter and managers of the LeCoultre Watch Co, they agreed to buy the patent. The Jaeger-LeCoultre Atmos has been a source of pride for the company, which still produces it to this day. It is the closest that mankind has come to making a perpetual motion machine, a great timepiece and a conversation piece that any serious watch collector would love to display in the home.
Metal: Gold Plated Metal
Dimensions: 240 x 215 x 155 mm
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Jaeger-Le Coultre
Jaeger-LeCoultre is a Swiss luxury watch and clock manufacturer founded by Antoine LeCoultre in 1833 and is based in Le Sentier, Switzerland. Since 2000, the company has been a fully owned subsidiary of the Swiss luxury group Richemont.
Jaeger-LeCoultre is regarded as a top-tier Richemont brand. It has hundreds of inventions, patents and over one thousand movements to its name, including the world's smallest movement, one of the world's most complicated wristwatches (Grande Complication), and a timepiece of near-perpetual movement (the Atmos clock).