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Radium dials
Radium dials







The direction things are glowing…Īs watch brands search for novelty and individuality, lume cannot just glow, it has to glow in an interesting way. It is made and distributed by Seiko as their LumiBrite compound and in Switzerland it is Super Luminova (it is probably made for Rolex as Chromalite too, but Rolex aren’t saying).

radium dials

Luminova has been developed and improved since 1993. Luminova does not self-generate light in the same way as a radioactive paint but it is the next best thing and both safer and cheaper. Base on strontium-aluminate, this wonder material was not only radiation-free but was brighter and more long-lasting than any previous zinc-sulphide based paint. In 1993 the company developed a ground-breaking luminous compound they christened Luminova. Over the years Nemoto & Co mirrored the wider world’s progression through a range of radioactive sources, using, first radium, then after 1960, promethium. In 1941 as Japan entered WWII Kenzo Nemoto launched his company supplying luminous paint for military dials. (Ironically, promethium decays into samarium, a weak alpha emitter with a half-life of 106 billion years…) Great for watches that will be serviced routinely but not so good for the civilian market. Promethium is a stronger exciter than tritium making the dials and hands brighter, but with a half-life of only 2.6 years, it doesn’t last long.

RADIUM DIALS MOD

The ‘Circle P’ indicating its use can be clearly seen on Seiko quartz chronographs supplied to the British MOD and promethium notably found its way onto the hands and dials of the US Navy Tornek-Rayville Blancpains, leading to an alarming radiation warning being engraved on the case back. Promethium and tritium were the next candidates for use as low-grade radiation sources. Later dial details added by Rolex such as ‘underlines’ show that the replacement dials had been checked to be ‘strontium-free’. It also found its way into the Bakelite bezels of the early 6542 causing them to be recalled and changed for anodised aluminium. Over in Switzerland, strontium was used on dials by a number of manufacturers including Rolex. Luminous paint was invented in 1902 by William J Hammer who first mixed radium with zinc sulphide, but he failed to patent his creation and lost out to George Kunz at Tiffany & Co., who did.

radium dials

Radium is a curious element, always warmer than its surroundings due to the radiation it emits, but what suited it to watchmaking was the fact it glowed and could be used to impregnate the hands and dials of watches and clocks making them glow at night. The substance that put the ‘time’ into night-time was discovered by Marie and Pierre Curie in 1898. In 1680 Daniel Quare created repeating watches that could tell time in the dark to the nearest quarter of an hour, but it would be a further 70 years before time to the nearest minute would be possible and even then, these marvels of miniaturisation were only available to the privileged rich. Before widespread public and domestic lighting, dark meant dark and passing hours might be marked by a chiming clock if you were rich enough, or close enough to a church. This means that early watches, however finely made or accurate, were at best part-time timepieces. Part 2: LumeĪ watch is only as good as its ability to tell you the time. Delve into the history of dial design and the elements that make up some of the most famous watch faces of our time.







Radium dials