Hi Greg,

> Leap Second has a series of photos.
> http://www.leapsecond.com/museum/au1210/

That would be me. There are quite a few versions of the Austron 1210 Crystal 
Oscillator, at least models A through D, as I tried to show on that page. I 
have a few and they are handy instruments, with a vintage appeal.

> BUT at $900 ... seller in King George, VA obviously thought he found gold.
> ** must be heat exhaustion **

Ha! You think you're joking -- but what you're missing is that this version has 
the rare and valuable Patek Philippe analog clock. Perhaps you have also seen 
these beautiful electro-mechanical Patek movements on the early models of hp 
5065A and hp 5061A frequency standards. Yes, even -hp- used them for their 
precious atomic clocks; that's how respectable and reliable these Patek 
mechanical impulse movements are.

It's a highly desirable clock display because not only is it of interest to the 
bottom-feeding collectors of vintage electronic T&F gear (like we time-nuts) 
but it's also of high-value to collectors of anything Patek Philippe (like the 
private jet and private island crowd). It's a rare cross between engineering 
and art; between function and fashion; between electronics and elegance; 
between history and who cares.

I first ran into this phenomenon years ago when innocently searching for words 
like 5065 clock. Yes, there were some hp rubidium vapor clocks, but there were 
also some mechanical wrist watches with the same model number -- but for more 
than ten times the price! That's when I knew that being a time-nut was a far 
cheap hobby compared to designer wrist-watches. The latter is an utterly 
massive industry with per-item prices in the 1e4, 1e5 and even 1e6 dollar 
range. It's what allows a time-nut to say: Honey, I bought a 5065 yesterday and 
saved $14,000!

To get a better idea, take a few eye candy moments:

1) You've never seen so many cool-looking electronic clocks:

https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=patek-philippe-electronic-tower-master-clock

2) A very nice Patek Philippe Master Clock System that sold for a mere $125,000:

http://www.christies.com/lotfinder/Lot/patek-philippe-an-integrated-electronic-master-clock-5864933-details.aspx

3) Recent eBay auction. The Patek clock stepper movement alone:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/191026418966

4) I'm not joking about the "5065". Take your pick -- $1,500 or $23,000:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/252922060868

http://www.ebay.com/itm/201889713477

5) A collection of Patek photos I grabbed over the years:

http://leapsecond.com/museum/patek/

So, now you know why the eBay seller of http://www.ebay.com/itm/282490626815 is 
not suffering from heat exhaustion. If nothing else, his item is cheaper (and 
far less shipping costs) than this one:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/282495468972

/tvb

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Gregory Beat" <w...@icloud.com>
To: <time-nuts@febo.com>
Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2017 5:24 PM
Subject: [time-nuts] BTTF : Austron 1210-C Crystal Clock


> BTTF : Back to the Future "moment"
> 
> Austron was a company based in Austin, TX that manufactured crystal clocks 
> for military and industry in late 1970s.  Leap Second has a series of photos.
> http://www.leapsecond.com/museum/au1210/
> 
> Austron 1210-D Manual (digital model)
> Product produces 1 MHz and 5 MHz sine wave.
> http://www.to-way.com/tf/1210D.pdf
> 
> Used Austron 1210-C appeared on eBay, auction # 282490626815
> BUT at $900 ... seller in King George, VA obviously thought he found gold.
> ** must be heat exhaustion **
> 
> greg
> Sent from iPad Air


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