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  2. Laurel Burch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurel_Burch

    Laurel grew up with a mixture of love and loss, but also with a keen brilliant artistic eye from her parents. [1] A rift grew between Laurel and her mother when Laurel was a teenager. While in high school, Laurel lived for a period with her father, her half-brothers and half-sister in La Canada, California but the arrangement ended abruptly.

  3. Button cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Button_cell

    Button, coin, or watch cells. A button cell, watch battery, or coin battery is a small battery made of a single electrochemical cell and shaped as a squat cylinder typically 5 to 25 mm (0.197 to 0.984 in) in diameter and 1 to 6 mm (0.039 to 0.236 in) high – resembling a button.

  4. Watch House Battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watch_House_Battery

    Watch House Battery is a former 19th-century gun battery, built as one of a number of batteries to defend the Eastern approaches to Plymouth Sound, for the defence of the Royal Naval Dockyard at Devonport. The battery was originally built as a small pentagonal redoubt with emplacements for five guns.

  5. List of battery sizes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_battery_sizes

    A Battery: Eveready 742: 1.5 V: Metal tabs H: 101.6 L: 63.5 W: 63.5 Used to provide power to the filament of a vacuum tube. B Battery: Eveready 762-S: 45 V: Threa­ded posts H: 146 L: 104.8 W: 63.5 Used to supply plate voltage in vintage vacuum tube equipment. Origin of the term B+ for plate voltage power supplies.

  6. Gallet & Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallet_&_Company

    Japanese fan and laurel trademark, registered in 1896 by Julien Gallet (1862–1934). This mark was used for Swiss made "Laurel" watches exported to Kintarō Hattori, founder of the Seiko company and Gallet's trade partner in Japan during the late 19th and early 20th century. Gallet wins the "Grand Diploma of Honor" at the 1905 Liege exhibition.

  7. Remontoire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remontoire

    The gravity remontoire was invented by Swiss clockmaker Jost Bürgi around 1595. Usually the "Kalenderuhr" (three month running, springdriven, calendar-desk-clock) Bürgi is considered the oldest surviving clock with a remontoire, even if it does not provide power to the escapement during the few seconds of the daily cycle where the remontoire weight gets wound up by the spring. [2]

  8. Regina pocket watches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regina_pocket_watches

    Regina watches are occasionally stamped with the name of an American city, indicating that some were sold in the United States. The National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors describes Regina watches as an inferior brand of Omega, but mentions that some were adjusted highly enough to be used as railroad timepieces, which was the ...

  9. Water Resistant mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Resistant_mark

    The watch shall be placed on a heated plate at a temperature between 40 °C and 45 °C until the watch has reached the temperature of the heated plate (in practice, a heating time of 10 minutes to 20 minutes, depending on the type of watch, will be sufficient). A drop of water, at a temperature between 18 °C and 25 °C shall be placed on the ...