Design Attributes
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Latitude and Longitude reference Greenwich where Miss Britian III is now exhibited
- Dial design follows our L1 Longitude watch with period hands
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Half exhibition watch back display with record event text engraving
Case
- 44mm diameter 316L stainless steel billet machined & polished case
- Match machined & polished 316L stainless steel DSL lugs
- Polished and engraved 316L stainless steel back with complex engraving and exhibition sapphire crystal window
Main Crown
- Screw lock & sprung deep straight knurled & polished 316L stainless steel with triple seal technology
Crystals
- Custom double curved domed sapphire glass with blue AR coating on the internal surface
Movement
- ETA 2824
- 28,800vph
- 25 jewels
- Self-winding ball bearing rotor
- Date function
- Power reserve ~38 hours
- Water resistance: 10ATM (100m) 100% tested
Dial
- Black enamel over brass substrate with over printed white numerals
Hands
- Polished steel with inset SuperLuminova X1 luminous pigment
- Polished steel diamond cut sweep hand
Dimensions
- 44mm diameter
- 14.1mm thick
- 22mm lug width
- 49.6mm lug to lug pin spacing
Strap
- 22/20mm Zero West custom Military and aerospace grade cross-linked fluoroelastomer rubber. 1 fixed and 1 sliding keeper
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Reverse sculptured relief
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Matt finish
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Black PVD stainless steel buckle with engraved ZW logo
BRITISH ENGINEERING
Hubert Scott-Paine was a British designer, engineer, businessman and successful powerboat racer who epitomised the qualities of a great entrepreneur. Born in Shoreham-by-Sea in 1891, Scott-Paine would go on to forge an illustrious career which would see him mastermind the creation of the Supermarine AviationCompany as well as the first cross-Channel flying-boat service, the British Power Boat Company and Imperial Airways. He was a thrill seeker and with his Supermarine aircraft company, won the coveted 1922Schneider Seaplane Trophy.
Not satisfied with sitting back on the Schneider Trophy success, Scott-Paine turned his attention to his love of the water by designing a groundbreaking hydroplane boat. The project was cloaked in secrecy at his Hythe based British Power Boat Company and within just ten weeks, the iconic world record breaking single engined craft named Miss Britain III was launched.
The 1933 single engined hydroplane was designed by Scott-Paine and Fred Cooper to challenge for the International Harmsworth Trophy. It was a revolutionary design with aluminium reinforced wooden stringers and a highly polished Alclad pure aluminium skin and because of its groundbreaking geometry and lightweight materials, it weighed in at just 1.5 tons. Powered by a 1350 horsepower Napier Lion engine, and with a specially designed propeller, Miss Britain III was able to travel in excess of 100mph.
In September 1933 Scott-Paine piloted Miss Britain IIIin the Harmsworth Trophy challenge. He was narrowly beaten in a thrilling contest by Miss America X, a 38ft four engined, 7,800 horsepower colossus of a boat. The racing was close and the losing margin less than 1.5mph, but despite his defeat, Scott-Paine was lauded a British hero in what was described by the press as a “David vs Goliath” contest.
Just two months later on 16th November 1933 on Southampton Water, Scott-Paine set a new world water speed record in Miss Britain III, being the first single engined speedboat to exceed 100mph. A record that remarkably stood until the 1980’s.
TIME: 16/11/1933 – PLACE: 50.845°N 1.328°W