
I was going through some of my spare parts last night and came across a caseback with the serial number P970145. And that looked terribly familiar... Until now, no one has had a suggestion why the P1s had such an odd serial number block. Why the "P" prefix [again, the only Pulsar numbers with a prefix of any kind], and why such an early watch would have such high numbers. I think I have the missing part of the puzzle. This is a stainless back to a Hamilton one-button model. So the answer would seem to be...the P1s have this serial designation because...it's NOT a Time Computer serial number...it's a Hamilton serial number! Probably put there, at the Hamilton facility, at the same time the HAMILTON name was stamped onto the P1 casebacks. I consider the chance of this being just a coincidence, and having the same letter prefix, to be as near zero as it gets in this universe [although why this particular block was chosen is still anybody's guess...it could have been completely arbitrary]. Check out all your early Hamiltons, gentlemen; I'm willing to bet there is one even closer to the magic 754xxx block than mine. And if somebody has a better explanation...please, let's hear it!
Now, why the known numbers span more than the number of watches actually made...that's another question entirely, and I think I
may have a guess to make about that, too, but one thing at a time.
Oh, and I'm still looking for more Hamilton-marked P2s...especially in stainless...where are those???
Now, why the known numbers span more than the number of watches actually made...that's another question entirely, and I think I
may have a guess to make about that, too, but one thing at a time.
Oh, and I'm still looking for more Hamilton-marked P2s...especially in stainless...where are those???
Last edited by bruce wegmann on 07 Aug 2009, 07:56, edited 1 time in total.