Triplock Winding crown: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus Watch-Wiki
Zur Navigation springen Zur Suche springen
(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „thumb|Sea-Dweller 4000 steel Oyster [[Datei:Rolex GMT-Master II Weißgold Triplock-Aufzugskrone.jpg|thumb…“)
 
Zeile 4: Zeile 4:
 
'''Winding crown of [[Rolex/en|Rolex]]'''
 
'''Winding crown of [[Rolex/en|Rolex]]'''
  
The Triplock winding crown is a patented triple waterproofness system designed especially for divers’ watches. Developed by Rolex, it resists water pressure to depths of 300 metres (1,000 feet) on the Submariner models and some other Professional models, and 3,900 metres (12,800 feet) on the Rolex Deepsea. First introduced in 1970, the Triplock system consists of 10 different elements crafted from the most reliable materials. The winding crown screws down against the Oyster case as tightly and hermetically as a submarine’s hatch.<ref>[http://www.rolex.de/en Rolex - offizielle Webseite]</ref>
+
The Triplock winding crown is a patented triple waterproofness system designed especially for divers’ watches. Developed by Rolex, it resists water pressure to depths of 300 metres (1,000 feet) on the Submariner models and some other Professional models, and 3,900 metres (12,800 feet) on the Rolex Deepsea. First introduced in 1970, the Triplock system consists of 10 different elements crafted from the most reliable materials. The winding crown screws down against the Oyster case as tightly and hermetically as a submarine’s hatch.<ref>[http://www.rolex.de/en Rolex - official Website]</ref>
  
 
== Quellen ==
 
== Quellen ==

Version vom 11. Mai 2015, 13:14 Uhr

Sea-Dweller 4000 steel Oyster
GMT-Master II white gold Triplock Winding crown
Cosmograph Daytona platinum Triplock Winding crown

Winding crown of Rolex

The Triplock winding crown is a patented triple waterproofness system designed especially for divers’ watches. Developed by Rolex, it resists water pressure to depths of 300 metres (1,000 feet) on the Submariner models and some other Professional models, and 3,900 metres (12,800 feet) on the Rolex Deepsea. First introduced in 1970, the Triplock system consists of 10 different elements crafted from the most reliable materials. The winding crown screws down against the Oyster case as tightly and hermetically as a submarine’s hatch.[1]

Quellen