What SPEEDMASTER are you wearing today?

  • Please add our email support@horologyboard.com and/or domain horologyboard.com into your whitelist to make sure emails are not filtered or blocked. If you have registered but have not received your activation email, please check you spam/junk folder. If you still cannot find your email to activate your account, please Contact Us. Thank you.

MrE

Content Contributor
Feb 27, 2018
281
559
93
A brief history ...

The Omega Speedmaster is one of the most iconic and thought after watches.

The ‘Speedy’, as it is often lovingly called, is also well known as the "Moonwatch", as it was the first watch to go into space and eventually to the moon.

It seems ironic to me that the Rolex "Cosmograph Daytona" associates closely with car racing and race car drivers, whereas the Omega "Speedmaster" associates with the concept of space exploration and cosmonauts. :)


The first Omega Speedmaster - CK 2915 (1957-1959)
The "Broad Arrow"

Nevertheless, initially, the first Omega Speedmaster CK2915 ‘broad arrow’ was introduced as a racing and sports chronograph and it was originally marketed to car enthusiasts to help measure land speed.

It was one of the first watches to place its tachymeter outside the dial.
The first Speedmaster CK2915.jpg


Omega Speedmaster - CK 2998 (1959)
The "Spacewatch"

The Speedmaster however caught the attention of NASA when Wally Schirra wore his own private Omega Speedmaster CK2998 aboard Mercury-Atlas 8
(Sigma 7) on October 3, 1962.
800px-Omega_Speedmaster_on_V207_watchband.jpg
Speedmaster-CK-2998-1959.jpg
(The Ck 2998 was re-edited with a special edition in 2012, the Speedmaster FOIS (First Omega In Space) that features the same case, dial and hands design)

The CK 2998 is the first watch ever worn in outer space.


Omega Speedmaster - ST 105.003 (1965)
The "Testwatch"

BS-W-176-Omega-105.003-Ed-White-Transitional-19.jpg

A committee was put together and finally in 1964, the Speedmaster CK 105.003, along with 2 other brands (Longines and Rolex), was put through a series of processes called the “Qualification Test Procedures,” which included 11 different tests:​

  1. High temperature: 48 hours at a temperature of 160°F (71°C) followed by 30 minutes at 200°F (93°C).
  2. Low temperature: 4 hours at a temperature of 0°F (-18°C).
  3. Temperature-Pressure: 15 cycles of heating to 160°F (71°C) for 45 minutes, followed by cooling to 0°F (-18°C) for 45 minutes at 10−6 atm.
  4. Relative humidity: 240 hours at temperatures varying between 68°F and 160°F (20°C and 71°C) in a relative humidity of at least 95%.
  5. Oxygen atmosphere: 48 hours in an atmosphere of 100% oxygen at a pressure of 0.35 atm.
  6. Shock: Six shocks of 40 G, each 11 milliseconds in duration, in six different directions.
  7. Acceleration: From 1 G to 7.25 G within 333 seconds, along an axis parallel to the longitudinal spacecraft axis.
  8. Decompression: 90 minutes in a vacuum of 10-6 atm at a temperature of 160°F (71°C) and 30 minutes at 200°F (93°C).
  9. High pressure: 1.6 atm for a minimum period of one hour.
  10. Vibration: Three cycles of 30 minutes of vibration varying from 5 to 2000 Hz.
  11. Acoustic noise: 130 DB over a frequency range of 40 to 10,000 Hz, duration 30 minutes.
Only the Omega Speedmaster survived and NASA declared it operational for space exploration and flight certified: ‘Operational and environmental tests of the three selected chronographs have been completed; and, as a result of the test, Omega chronographs have been calibrated and issued to three members of the Gemini Titan III crews.’

The ST 105.003 went on to be the first watch ever worn outside of a space capsule.

Gus Grissom and John Young wore the first officially qualified Speedmasters on Gemini 3 on March 23, 1965. Several months later, Ed White made the first American space walk during Gemini 4 with a Speedmaster 105.003 strapped to the outside of the left-side sleeve of his G4C space suit.
EdWhiteFirstAmericanSpacewalker.1965.ws.jpg


 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: PACCBET
OP
MrE

MrE

Content Contributor
Feb 27, 2018
281
559
93
Omega Speedmaster Professional - ST 105.012 (1966)
The real "Moonwatch"

cbfed4022c584668272ebb89fd2670da.jpg

Neil Amrstrong and Buzz Aldrin reached the Moon with Apollo 11 wearing their Speedmaster ST 105.012
800px-AS11-36-5390HR.jpg

Neil Armstrong however had left his 105.012 Speedmaster inside the Lunar Module before setting foot on the moon.

Therefore, Buzz Aldrin's 105.012 Speedmaster became the first watch to be actually worn on the Moon.
800px-Aldrin_Apollo_11_original.jpg


Ironically, the 105.012 Speedmaster lacks the inscription: "The First Watch Worn on the Moon", which subsequent models carry, since their manufacture predates the Moon landing.
Omega_MoonWatch_Back2r.jpg



Omega Speedmaster Professional - ST 145.012 (1967)

In 1967, Speedmaster reference 105.012 was updated to reference 145.012.
Vintage_Omega_Speedmaster_"Pre-moon".jpg

As an interesting side note: In 1968, American insurance salesman Ralph Plaisted and three companions were the first confirmed expedition to reach the North Pole by land on snowmobiles. The team successfully used the same reference 145.012 Omega Speedmasters as the Apollo program along with sextants for navigation.


Omega Speedmaster Professional - ST 145.022 (1968)

Speedmaster-ST-145.022-1968.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Nivka and PACCBET