This rare, Russian, USSR, Probeda (Victory) men's vintage military dress wristwatch would be an excellent and unique addition to your vintage watch collection!!

Manufactured in the 1980's, at the Petrodvorets 
watch factory, the all stainless steel polished case, with coin edge bezel, measures 34 mm across, excluding crown and lugs, and surrounds a flawless crisp white dial complimented by black spade hour and minute hands, large black Roman numerals, black outer chapter, and sub-second dial at 6 o'clock.


The highly regarded 15 jewel, 
ZIM cal. 2602, manual wind movement has been recently professionally oiled, serviced, and adjusted, sets and winds smoothly, is running strong, and keeping good time.

It has a snap-down back and has been fitted with a new brown genuine leather, hand-made Nato strap with stainless steel buckles.

Please Note:  All of my vintage Soviet watches are serviced and restored by professionals in The Ukraine. Their shops are now shuttered during the conflict there.  We hope that peace is restored soon and the wonderful citizens of Ukraine can live in peace and that we can, once again, offer their products to you.


STOCK CODE: Z-36



 About the Brand

History of the Watch Movement "Pobeda"

Based on a French design, the Pobeda's simple, 15-jewel movement was cost-effective, reliable, and easy to manufacture and maintain. Prior to World War II, during a period of rapid industrialization of the Soviet Union, the Soviet government sought international funding and expertise in developing a domestic industry for timepieces. Eventually the French watch manufacturer LIP was chosen; they established a new watch factory in Penza and licensed several movement designs to the new establishment. One design dating from 1908, the R-26 movement, was further developed and renamed the K-26, with significant alterations to the original design. World War II temporarily disrupted these plans, but after the Allied victory, this watch design was quickly finished at Penza, and full-scale production commenced at the First Moscow Watch Factory. Joseph Stalin chose the name Pobeda (Victory) to celebrate the end of the war.

Factories Having Produced under the brand "Pobeda"

 

Pobeda watches before and after the fall of Soviet Union

During Soviet times

In the Soviet Union, a product brand was not necessarily exclusive to a particular manufacturing site (this changed though in the 60's when each factory got its own brands), and during its lifetime, production of Pobeda watches was shifted between the following plants:

·        Penza Watch Factory (Пензенский Часовой Завод): for a few years from 1945

·        First Moscow Watch Factory (Первый Московский Часовой Завод): 1946 to 1953

·        Petrodvorets Watch Factory (Петродворцовый Часовой Завод): 1946 to nowadays

·        Chistopol Watch Factory (Чистопольский часовой завод): 1949 to the c.1950

·        Second Moscow Watch Factory (Второй московский часовой завод): 1953 to 1964

 

ZIM / ЗИМ (Maslennikov Watch Factory)

In 1906, the Russian Emperor Nicholas II issued an official decree entitled, “On the construction of military plants at public funds”. The result was the establishment of the Provisional Economic Commission for the construction of the Samara Pipe Factory. The same year, construction began on another plant which would produce aluminum tube and capsule sleeves for three-inch rapid-fire guns. By September, 1911, the factory was completed, and workers celebrated the grand opening of the Second Pipe Factory in Samara, Russia.  

The Second Pipe Factory staffed some 2500 workers and was primarily responsible for producing fuses for artillery shells. The factory was so large that a residential village was established nearby. This settlement was aptly named, “Workers”. The plant closed briefly in 1918, then reopened in 1923 under a new name, Maslennikov, named after the first chairman of the Samara City Council, Alexander Maslennikov. (The full factory name, Завод имени Масленникова, is often abbreviated ЗИМ, or ZIM). During World War II, ZIM fulfilled orders from the Ministry of Defense to produce ammunition for the armed forces.

After the war, ZIM began production of civilian goods, namely the caliber 2602 watch movement intended for Pobedas. This caliber entered production in 1950 and continued to be produced until the factory eventually shuttered in the early-2000s. With a production spanning over five decades, this made the ZIM caliber 2602 the longest-produced caliber of any Soviet watch movement.

Beginning in the 1960s, production at ZIM expanded greatly to included electronic devices, medical equipment, sewing machines, and automobile parts. Specialized subdivisions of ZIM were responsible for building residential houses, schools, kindergartens, dormitories, restaurants, and sports facilities. Given the sheer size of the plant and the enormous number of factory employees, ZIM developed an urban transportation route including tram, bus, and trolley lines.

In the 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, ZIM was in deep financial crisis. By the late-90s, the plant’s total debt reached about 1 billion rubles. In 2005, the factory declared bankruptcy, and by June 30th, 2006, the factory had shuttered. While a few of the original buildings connected to the plant remain today, the majority of the factory now stands in ruins.

We offer free, first class domestic shipping and ship worldwide Priority Mail to insure safe, swift, and reliable shipping to our international customers for a flat fee of $34.00.  (Canada may be slightly less) 

Please note, we offer our items on multiple sites and will not be removed from other sites until payment has been received and rarely may mean that your selection may be sold out prior to your payment has posted.


We are Stonehenge Watch Company and have been selling vintage timepieces and new watches on the internet for over 16 years with hundreds of happy, satisfied, often repeat, customers 

Seller information

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