Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
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Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog updates you with all the information on the watches, their important parts, how its made, dial manufacturing, and a complete guide to Mk2 dial part 3! Nicholas Hacko is a watch dealer and watchmaker in Sydney, Australia.
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1w ago
As the first NH55 are ready to be shipped to Germany and the US, we are finally able to answer the most asked question: who are the people willing to pay $35,000 for an Australian made watch - and equally importantly - why?
The customer profile is surprisingly definite, rigid and unmistakable. All NH55 owners share these three characteristics:
1. They deeply understand and appreciate the mechanical challenge of making complex, small, highly precise watch components. Micro engineering and micro machining is difficult to master. There are only a handful of independ ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
2w ago
Over the years, I’ve spent a great deal of time collecting railway pocket watches. The collection contains between 400-500 individual timepieces. Covering mainly Australian and Japanese issued watches, which were in actual use, as official watches by their respective national railways.
It all started as some harmless fun, until it become a passion. Eventually, the collection took a life of it’s own, presenting a ‘snapshot of an era’. But as the collection grew, it become obvious that the historical value as a lot exceeded the value of the individual pieces. My ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1M ago
This is a close up image of our Mark 2 titanium guilloche dial. Received by an overseas ambassador who wanted to show the world his excitement. This photo has been circulated online and has received glowing reviews from both machinists and watch enthusiasts.
It is easy to see why: we are talking about perfection of design and perfection of cut. Shaping titanium is extremely difficult at this microscopic level.
I am not going to say that Mark 2 is the most perfect dial ever made, but it is the first and most perfect guilloche dial ever manufactured in Australia. B ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1M ago
NH Micro in the top 50 most innovative manufacturing companies in Australia!
This week has been huge for manufacturing in Australia. The federal government has released some ambitious initiatives between defence spending, on-shoring commitments and manufacturing revitalisation funds.
Back on earth, AMW, Australia's only manufacturing fair has been running all week, with a huge number of attendees flocking to the ICC in Darling Harbour to see the latest and greatest in hands-on manufacturing.
Piggy backing off of the AMW week, AuManufacturing, Australia's leading man ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1M ago
"The Repco Supercars Championship is the leading Motorsport category in Australasia, with events taking place across Australia and New Zealand. Last year saw Seiko celebrate 10 years of partnership with the Repco Supercars Championship as the official timepiece of Australasia’s Premier Motorsports series. The category is renowned for its exciting racing and the closeness of competition, with millimetres and milliseconds often being the difference between victory and despair.
2024 sees the continuation of the partnership between Seiko 5 Sports and the Repco Superca ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1M ago
As many of you know, we love manufacturing. Over the last 8 years (It's been that long, crazy!) we have learned a lot by focusing on making watches.
However, 3 or 4 years ago, parallel precision sectors, like the medical, space, semiconductor and high-end scientific instrumentation sectors, started to become curious about our capabilities. Specifically in handling complex, highly precise and very small parts. This interest was big enough to spin-out a separate business called NH Micro. If you've been following along our newsletter and journey, you might have heard ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1M ago
If you have three and a half hours to kill, here is a suggestion. A Deutche Welle documentary titled "Twenty Japanese businesses making the most expensive products."
A match made in heaven: Deutche Welle's masterful cinematography and objectivity showcasing the Japanese pursuit for perfection. And no, the documentary has very little to do with money or price; and everything to do with craftsmanship, patience and time.
The Japanese say that it takes 3 years to learn how put a piece of eel meat on a skewer. And a lifetime to learn how to grill it to perfection. A ba ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
1M ago
Today we are introducing two newly arrived Seiko Astron. Both watches are limited edition (1,200 pieces worldwide) and are black titanium, fitted on a bracelet. Although they share the same concept—a purple star dial with gold hands and indices—they are essentially two different watches.
The first one, SSH145J, is made for a nerd. A buyer who wants to squeeze the last feature out of the 5X53 calibre movement. And the list of features is simply astonishing: Overcharge prevention function, power save function, perpetual calendar to February 28, 2100, world time func ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
2M ago
Yesterday was very exciting- we are in space!
A local Australian company launched a metaphorical "bus" to space. On the bus were payloads from many other tangential Australian space companies, including Spiral Blue, who we mentioned a few weeks ago. Another company that we do some critical hardware manufacture for is called Valiant Space. Valiant is a young company in Brisbane, manufacturing in-space non toxic space propulsion systems. In short, ultra small rocket engines. These rocket motors are responsible for steering the bus in space. Without them, It's safe to say that the mission ..read more
Nicholas Hacko Watchmaker Blog
3M ago
Last week we delivered a project to ANSTO, Australia's Nuclear, Science and Technology Organisation. Specifically to the Synchrotron in Melbourne. The Synchrotron is Australia's most advanced platform for performing scientific experiments with X-rays and high energy particles. For a small company like ours to be approached by a very large, prestigious government organisation is an honour, and I can tell you for free that working with these engineers often makes watchmaking look like Lego Duplo!
The project we helped with ..read more