Up for grabs is a Tornek Rayville
Reference TR-900 with 41mm case
Early number 01XX presumably from 1964 delivery batch.
An exert from a previous Phillips essay which best describes this model:
The Tornek-Rayville TR-900 is one of the rarest and most sought-after holy grails for military watch collectors. Modeled after the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms, which served a number of elite military units around the world, this diver’s watch was the only design that conformed to U.S. military specification MIL-W-22176A, a feat that not a single native manufacturer could achieve in the early 1960s. Naturally, the U.S. Navy could not directly commission Swiss-made Blancpain watches due to the 1933 “Buy American Act”. To turn this situation around, Allen V. Tornek, a New York-based diamond dealer, created a small local testing laboratory so that Blancpain watches could be tested and certified on American soil. Although Tornek and Blancpain successfully landed the contract as the supplier for the U.S. armed forces, this partnership was shortly ceased as the production of the Tornek-Rayville TR-900 was too expensive.
According to Blancpain’s “Fifty Fathoms, The Dive and Watch History 1953 – 2013″, 780 pieces of the ref. TR-900 were initially delivered to the U.S. armed forces in 1964, while a second batch of 300 examples were subsequently made in 1966. They were never available to civilians and were strictly government property. To prevent these watches from falling into improper hands once they had served their purpose, a large portion of the TR-900 were discarded in the early 1970s and sent to the bottom of the sea in concrete-filled boxes, along with other low-level atomic waste such as uniforms and badges. Due to their un-ceremonial burials, the TR-900 is exceedingly rare. Most original pieces that had been in action were never returned by to the military and are distinguished by the antimagnetic test-marking on the caseback, along with their serial number embossed below, like the present example.
The condition of this example is spectacular. The dial is flawless with lume fully intact. No scratches, no lume loss, no relume. There is a chip on the original crystal you can see near the 10 o’clock marker, but it is not on the dial.
The bezel is amazing with nice patina and only minor signs of wear.
The case shows minor signs of wear, but remains original, unpolished, and without any eye-sores.
Caseback is original and the serial number of the watch is clearly visible. The anti-magnetic dust cover is present.
The watch winds and runs. Recently out of a private collection where it has been over the last several years.