IEEE Latvia Section History and Milestones:Electronic Quartz Wristwatch, 1969: Difference between pages

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== Electronic Quartz Wristwatch, 1969  ==


[http://webmail.itl.rtu.lv/ieee/ Link to Section Homepage]  
[[Image:Electronic Quartz wristwatch Japan.jpg|thumb]]  


== Background  ==
[[IEEE Tokyo Section History|IEEE Tokyo Section]], Dedication: 25 November 2004 


The IEEE Latvia Section is part of [[Region 8 (Europe, Middle East, & Africa) History|Region 8]] and covers the area of the Republic of Latvia.  
''After ten years of research and development at Suwa Seikosha, a manufacturing company of Seiko Group, a team of engineers headed by Tsuneya Nakamura produced the first quartz wristwatch to be sold to the public. The Seiko Quartz-Astron 35SQ was introduced in Tokyo on December 25, 1969. Crucial elements included a quartz crystal oscillator, a hybrid [[Integrated Circuits|integrated circuit]], and a miniature stepping motor to turn the hands. It was accurate to within five seconds per month.''


The first talks about foundation of IEEE Latvia Section started in 2004, when IEEE Lithuania Section Officers visiting Riga Technical University. Finally, in 2007, during the meeting of European Nordic and Baltic countries IEEE Section officers, which was held in Riga, IEEE members from Latvia formed petition for the creation of Latvia Section.  
'''The plaque can be viewed at the Seiko Institute of Horology, 3-9-7, Higashi-Mukojima, Sumida-ku, Tokyo, Japan.'''


IEEE Latvia Section was founded February 16, 2008, with the first elected Chair Professor Leonids Ribickis. Since its creation, the Latvia Section has been working professionally in various activities, mainly within the city of Riga.  
The principle of quartz timekeeping had been known since Warren Marrison developed his first quartz clock in the 1920s. Research toward its practical utilization took place in Switzerland, the United States and Japan, the major task for scientists and engineers being how to miniaturize the mechanism. Among them, the development of the quartz wristwatch by the Seiko group was a pioneering work, and the following are key historic events.  


== Section Officers  ==
1. Research engineers at Seikosha factory, Suwa City, Japan, had conceived the idea of applying quartz technology to develop a new type of chronometer, and they succeeded to manufacture a practical quartz timepiece in1958 for use at a broadcasting station (CBC, Chubu Broadcasting Corporation) in Nagoya, Japan. However, it was still the size of a filing cabinet and it was obviously impossible to carry it.


{| cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="1" width="100%"
2. In 1959, Suwa Seikosha embarked on a quartz timepiece development mission called the "59A Project". This led to the creation of the marine chronometer, a clock that became Seiko's first entry in the Neuchatel Observatory Chronometer Competition in 1963.
|-
| Year
| Chair
| Vice Chair
| Secretary
| Treasurer
|-
| 2008
| colspan="4" | Armands Srazds – Deputy Chair
|-
| 2009
| Leonids Ribickis<br>
| Elmars Bekeris
| Armands Srazds
| Atis Kapenieks
|-
| 2010
| Leonids Ribickis
| Andrejs Romanovs
| Oskars Krievs
| Atis Kapenieks
|-
| 2011
| Leonids Ribickis
| Andrejs Romanovs
| Oskars Krievs
| Atis Kapenieks&nbsp;
|-
| 2012
| Andrejs Romanovs
| Leonids Ribickis
| Arnis Lektauers
| Yuri Merkuryev&nbsp;
|-
| 2013
| Andrejs Romanovs
| Leonids Ribickis
| Arnis Lektauers
| Yuri Merkuryev&nbsp;
|-
| 2014
| Leonids Ribickis
| Andrejs Romanovs
| Oskars Krievs
| Yuri Merkuryev&nbsp;
|}


== Membership  ==
3. In February 1964, a commercial version of the clock, called the crystal chronometer, was produced and it was successfully used when Seiko served as the official timing for the Tokyo Olympics that year. Subsequently other small quartz clocks were developed for the driving rooms (cockpits) of the Japanese Bullet Trains, Tokaido Shinkansen, which is also an IEEE Milestone.


As of 1 July 2014, the IEEE Latvia Section has a total of 113 active members:
4. In 1967, Suwa Seikosha developed a prototype of quartz wristwatch and entered the Neuchatel Observatory competition for the first time with quartz wristwatch.
*Life Member - 1
*Senior Member - 7
*Member - 75
*Affiliate - 2
*Associate Member - 2
*Graduate Student Member - 21
*Student Member - 10


== Chapters/Affinity Groups/Student branches  ==
5. Eventually Suwa Seikosha took a totally new approach from consumers stand point of view to develop [[Quartz Watch|quartz watches]]. After the extensive effort of engineering team and production factory, they finally succeeded in developing a practical quartz wristwatch type 35SQ (product name: SEIKO Quartz Astron) and it was first sold by K. Hattori &amp; Co., Ltd. (present-day Seiko Corporation) on Christmas Day 1969. Within one week of the introduction, 100 18-karat gold watches had been sold, at a retail price of $1,250.


*2009, [[IEEE Education Society History|IEEE Education Society]] Latvia Chapter was founded, with the first elected Chair Mr. Armands Strazds.
This quartz watch is accurate to plus or minus five&nbsp;seconds a month, or one minute per year. Its quartz crystal oscillates at a rate of 8,192 cycles per second, replaces the hairspring, the balance wheel, and the escapement in a mechanical watch. The watch’s movement has an electronic divider with an integrated circuit. It is powered by a miniature battery, which is made of silver, will last more than a year. Seiko's production and commercialization of this consumer type wristwatch stimulated the succeeding developments of both an improved and an advanced types of watches and clocks accelerating the transition from a mechanical to an electronic world, bringing a new age when everyone can hold an exact time conveniently. This was really the innovation in daily life of public and also innovation in manufacturing industry.
*2010, [[IEEE Computer Society History|IEEE Computer Society]] Latvia Chapter was founded, with the first elected Chair Professor Janis Grundspenkis.  
*2011, IEEE Latvia Section Student Branch was founded, with the first Deputy Chapter Chair Mrs. Inese Polaka
*2013, IEEE [[IEEE Power Electronics Society History|Power Electronics Society]], [[IEEE Industrial Electronics Society History|Industrial Electronics Society]] and [[IEEE Industry Applications Society History|Industry Applications Society]] Joint Chapter was founded, with the first Deputy Chapter Chair Professor Ilja Galkins


== The Baltic Cooperation  ==
== Map ==


The IEEE Latvia Section participates in a group titled the Baltic Cooperation, which consists of the following IEEE Sections: [[IEEE Denmark Section History|Denmark]], [[IEEE Estonia Section History|Estonia]], [[IEEE Finland Section History|Finland]], [[IEEE Iceland Section History|Iceland]], Latvia, [[IEEE Lithuania Section History|Lithuania]], [[IEEE Norway Section History|Norway]], [[IEEE Poland Section History|Poland]], [[IEEE Russia (Northwest) Section History|Russia North-West]], and [[IEEE Sweden Section History|Sweden]]. The objective of the IEEE Baltic Cooperation is to create a functioning collaboration between the Baltic Region sections which shall result in common activities, such as; joint events, joint chapters and common utilization of IEEE resources.  
{{#display_map:35.713322, 139.809265~ ~ ~ ~ ~Seiko Institute of Horology, Tokyo, Japan|height=250|zoom=10|static=yes|center=35.713322, 139.809265}}


== Major Events  ==
[[Category:Computing and electronics|Wristwatch]] [[Category:Oscillators|Wristwatch]]


*October 2009, Celebration of 125th Anniversary of IEEE. Plenary report: “Scientific Research in Riga Technical University in 2009”, speaker Professor Leonids Ribickis, attendance: more than 200 IEEE members and guests from different countries.
[[Category:Computing_and_electronics|{{PAGENAME}}]]
*May 2010, IEEE Region 8 94th Committee Meeting in Riga, Latvia, May 7-9, 2010. Region 8 Committee awarded Latvia Section for Exemplary Service and Dedication as a host of the 94th IEEE Region 8 Committee Meeting.
*February 2011, Technical Co-sponsor of 2011 Baltic Congress on Future Internet Communications BCFIC Riga 2011
*June 2011, first IEEE Distinguished Lecturers Program’ Lection in Latvia, Prof. Manos M.Tentzeris, "Inkjet-Printed Paper/Polymer-Based "Green" RFID and Wireless Sensor Nodes: The Final Step to Bridge Cognitive Intelligence, Nanotechnology and RF"
*October 2012, Technical Co-sponsor of 1st Congress of World Engineers and Riga Polytechnical Institute
*June 2013, Technical Co-Sponsor of the EUNIS 2013 Congress “ICT role for Next Generation Universities”
*November 2013, Co-Organizer of the 1st IEEE workshop on Advances in Information, Electronic and Electrical Engineering, organized by Latvia and Lithuania Sections
*August 2014, Technical Co-Sponsor of the European BEST (Board of European Students of Technology) Engineering Competition 2014 Final
 
== Archival documents ==
 
[[Media:IEEE_Geographic_Unit_Organizing_Document_-_Latvia.pdf|IEEE Geographic Unit Organizing Document - Latvia]]
 
[[Category:IEEE|Latvia]] [[Category:Geographical units|Latvia]] [[Category:Sections|Latvia]]

Revision as of 18:52, 6 January 2015

Electronic Quartz Wristwatch, 1969

Electronic Quartz wristwatch Japan.jpg

IEEE Tokyo Section, Dedication: 25 November 2004 

After ten years of research and development at Suwa Seikosha, a manufacturing company of Seiko Group, a team of engineers headed by Tsuneya Nakamura produced the first quartz wristwatch to be sold to the public. The Seiko Quartz-Astron 35SQ was introduced in Tokyo on December 25, 1969. Crucial elements included a quartz crystal oscillator, a hybrid integrated circuit, and a miniature stepping motor to turn the hands. It was accurate to within five seconds per month.

The plaque can be viewed at the Seiko Institute of Horology, 3-9-7, Higashi-Mukojima, Sumida-ku, Tokyo, Japan.

The principle of quartz timekeeping had been known since Warren Marrison developed his first quartz clock in the 1920s. Research toward its practical utilization took place in Switzerland, the United States and Japan, the major task for scientists and engineers being how to miniaturize the mechanism. Among them, the development of the quartz wristwatch by the Seiko group was a pioneering work, and the following are key historic events.

1. Research engineers at Seikosha factory, Suwa City, Japan, had conceived the idea of applying quartz technology to develop a new type of chronometer, and they succeeded to manufacture a practical quartz timepiece in1958 for use at a broadcasting station (CBC, Chubu Broadcasting Corporation) in Nagoya, Japan. However, it was still the size of a filing cabinet and it was obviously impossible to carry it.

2. In 1959, Suwa Seikosha embarked on a quartz timepiece development mission called the "59A Project". This led to the creation of the marine chronometer, a clock that became Seiko's first entry in the Neuchatel Observatory Chronometer Competition in 1963.

3. In February 1964, a commercial version of the clock, called the crystal chronometer, was produced and it was successfully used when Seiko served as the official timing for the Tokyo Olympics that year. Subsequently other small quartz clocks were developed for the driving rooms (cockpits) of the Japanese Bullet Trains, Tokaido Shinkansen, which is also an IEEE Milestone.

4. In 1967, Suwa Seikosha developed a prototype of quartz wristwatch and entered the Neuchatel Observatory competition for the first time with quartz wristwatch.

5. Eventually Suwa Seikosha took a totally new approach from consumers stand point of view to develop quartz watches. After the extensive effort of engineering team and production factory, they finally succeeded in developing a practical quartz wristwatch type 35SQ (product name: SEIKO Quartz Astron) and it was first sold by K. Hattori & Co., Ltd. (present-day Seiko Corporation) on Christmas Day 1969. Within one week of the introduction, 100 18-karat gold watches had been sold, at a retail price of $1,250.

This quartz watch is accurate to plus or minus five seconds a month, or one minute per year. Its quartz crystal oscillates at a rate of 8,192 cycles per second, replaces the hairspring, the balance wheel, and the escapement in a mechanical watch. The watch’s movement has an electronic divider with an integrated circuit. It is powered by a miniature battery, which is made of silver, will last more than a year. Seiko's production and commercialization of this consumer type wristwatch stimulated the succeeding developments of both an improved and an advanced types of watches and clocks accelerating the transition from a mechanical to an electronic world, bringing a new age when everyone can hold an exact time conveniently. This was really the innovation in daily life of public and also innovation in manufacturing industry.

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