PATEK PHILIPPE T2 MODULAR INTEGRATED TIMING SYSTEM
Patek Philippe Electronic Master Clock Timing System, Model T2, made in 1972
Watches and Accessories
Patek Philippe developed master timing systems to be used in an array of business and services including airports, broadcast stations, hospitals, military, NASA and even the Vatican. This five rack system is believed to have been made for the Geneva Airport where it controlled its mother and subsidiary clock system for almost a decade. These Modular Integrated Mother Clock Systems were accurate to .02 secs per 24 hours, allowing an almost limitless amount of subsidiary clocks on a system to operate in sync and accurately. T2 systems, such as this system, allowed for uninterrupted impulse distribution for a large number of secondary clocks and enabled the remote control of the equipment. The point of these timekeepers was to ensure that the subsidiary clocks indicate the exact same time without interruption even if there was an electrical interference or failure. The signals were driven by the unit’s own internal crystal quartz oscillator, or by an external time base such as a radio signal. The top rack is a SPbC 24R master clock, the core of the time keeping system that houses the quartz oscillator; the second rack, a 50 Hertz generator, is the redundancy system that eliminates the possibility of a disturbance and disruption on the primary unit; the third rack is for monitoring minutes and seconds as well as voltage, and the bottom two racks show the time in a select grouping of subsidiary clocks. Each master timing system was custom built with modular racks in order to allow for further expansion and customization as needed.
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Clock specifications
Reference Number: T2
Production Year: 1972
Original Date of Sale: 1972
Size: 26" high x 17" wide x 9" depth
Dial Color: Black
CSKU: 1529
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