Fossil Watch Serial Number Search

/autotune-efx-vst-crack.html. All you need is your watch's reference number or its make and model. You can usually find the reference number on the dial, case back, lugs, or in the watch's papers. Can't find the reference number or model name? Use the Watch Scanner in the Chrono24 app. It can recognize 15,000 watches and tell you their current market value with a single photo. Collectors and individuals looking to buy a pre-owned watch can submit a one-off search by completing the form here. We require the brand, model and serial number of the watch. The cost is £10 / €13 / $15 per search (plus VAT where applicable). We process searches within 5 minutes during office hours (see above for times).

Select your product category (watch, hybrid smartwatch, or touchscreen smartwatch). Select your product brand. Enter the style number of your product (typically located on the back of the watch, e.g. ES1234 or FTW1234). Confirm if your product is under warranty. Fossil Group, Inc. (“Fossil”) warrants that this Fossil product and accessories included in the packaging with the product (the “Product”) are free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use for the period commencing upon the date of purchase and continuing for two years. This is a voluntary manufacturer’s warranty. Garmin Support Center is where you will find answers to frequently asked questions and resources to help with all of your Garmin products.

Locating your Rolex serial number

The serial number of your watch is engraved on the case at the 6 o'clock end between the lugs. You will need to remove the bracelet/strap to see it. The model reference is engraved in the same place at the 12 o'clock end. As of August 2010, serial numbers for new Rolex watches are randomized, making it impossible to use the numbers for dating purposes.

1925 - 1930

25 - 27xxx = 1925
28 - 29xxx = 1926
30 - 32xxx = 1927
33 - 34xxx = 1928
35 - 37xxx = 1929
38 - 39xxx = 1930

1931 - 1940

40 - 41xxx = 1931
42 - 44xxx = 1932
45 - 48xxx = 1933
49 - 62xxx = 1934
63 - 80xxx = 1935
81 - 98xxx = 1936
99 - 116xxx = 1937
117 - 134xxx = 1938
135 - 163xxx = 1939
164 - 193xxx = 1940

1941 - 1950

Fossil Watch Serial Number Search Engine

194 - 222xxx = 1941
223 - 252xxx = 1942
253 - 282xxx = 1943
283 - 347xxx = 1944
348 - 412xxx = 1945
413 - 489xxx = 1946
490 - 549xxx = 1947
550 - 607xxx = 1948
608 - 672xxx = 1949
673 - 736xxx = 1950

1951 - 1960

737 - 803xxx = 1951
804 - 868xxx = 1952
869 - 933xxx = 1953
934 - 1104xxx = 1954
1105 - 1080xxx = 1955
1090 - 1160xxx = 1956
1170 - 1230xxx = 1957
1240 - 1310xxx = 1958
1320 - 1390xxx = 1959
1400 - 1480xxx = 1960

1961 - 1970

1480 - 1557xxx = 1961
1558 - 1662xxx = 1962
1663 - 1709xxx = 1963
1710 - 1791xxx = 1964
1792 - 1869xxx = 1965
1870 - 2159xxx = 1966
2160 - 2419xxx = 1967
2420 - 2679xxx = 1968
2680 - 2949xxx = 1969
2950 - 3209xxx = 1970

1971 - 1980

3210 - 3469xxx = 1971
3470 - 3739xxx = 1972
3740 - 3999xxx = 1973
4000 - 4179xxx = 1974
4280 - 4529xxx = 1975
4530 - 4999xxx = 1976
5000 - 5399xxx = 1977
5400 - 5899xxx = 1978
5900 - 6399xxx = 1979
6400 - 6899xxx = 1980

1981 - 1990

6900 - 7299xxx = 1981
7300 - 7799xxx = 1982
7800 - 8299xxx = 1983
8300 - 8599xxx = 1984
8600 - 9289xxx = 1985
9290 - 9759xxx = 1986
9760 - 9999xxx = 1987
Rxxxxxx = 1988
Lxxxxxx = 1989
Exxxxxx = 1990

1991 - 2000

Fossil Watch Serial Number Check

Xxxxxxx = 1991
Nxxxxxx = 1991
Cxxxxxx = 1992
Sxxxxxx = 1993
Wxxxxxx = 1995
Txxxxxx = 1996
Uxxxxxx = 1997
Axxxxxx = 1998
Pxxxxxx = 2000

2001 - 2010

Kxxxxxx = 2001
Yxxxxxx = 2002
Fxxxxxx = 2004
Dxxxxxx = 2005
Zxxxxxx = 2006
Mxxxxxx = 2008
Vxxxxxx = 2009

Locating your Omega serial number

Recent Omega watches usually carry their serial number somewhere on the back but they will be in extremely small laser-etched digits requiring a magnifier to read. Older Omega watches may only have the serial number on the inside of the watch, requiring a jeweler to open it for you.

1891 - 1900

1901 - 1910

20 - 24xxxxx = 1902
25 - 29xxxxx = 1905
30 - 39xxxxx = 1908

1911 - 1920

1921 - 1930

60 - 69xxxxx = 1923
70 - 74xxxxx = 1925
75 - 84xxxxx = 1930

1931 - 1940

1941 - 1950

95 - 99xxxxx = 1943
10xxxxxx = 1944
11xxxxxx = 1947
12xxxxxx = 1950

1951 - 1960

13xxxxxx = 1952
14xxxxxx = 1954
15xxxxxx = 1956
16xxxxxx = 1958
17xxxxxx = 1960

1951 - 1960

13xxxxxx = 1952
14xxxxxx = 1954
15xxxxxx = 1956
16xxxxxx = 1958
17xxxxxx = 1960

1961 - 1970

18xxxxxx = 1961
19xxxxxx = 1962
20xxxxxx = 1963
21xxxxxx = 1964
22xxxxxx = 1965
23 - 24xxxxxx = 1966
22xxxxxx = 1967
26 - 27xxxxxx = 1968
28 - 29xxxxxx = 1969
30 - 32xxxxxx = 1970

1971 - 1980

33xxxxxx = 1971
34 - 35xxxxxx = 1972
36 - 37xxxxxx = 1973
38xxxxxx = 1974
39xxxxxx = 1975
40xxxxxx = 1976
41xxxxxx = 1977
42 - 43xxxxxx = 1978
44xxxxxx = 1979

1981 - 1990

45 - 47xxxxxx = 1982
48xxxxxx = 1984
49xxxxxx = 1985
50xxxxxx = 1986
51 - 52xxxxxx = 1989

1991 - 2000

53xxxxxx = 1991
54xxxxxx = 1993
55xxxxxx = 1995
560 - 597xxxxx = 1998
598 - 609xxxxx = 1999
61 - 64xxxxxx = 2000

2001 - 2010

650 - 654xxxxx = 2001
655 - 679xxxxx = 2002
68 - 69xxxxxx = 2003
70 - 71xxxxxx = 2004
72 - 77xxxxxx = 2005
78 - 80xxxxxx = 2006
81 - 83xxxxxx = 2007
84xxxxxx = 2008

Locating your Panerai serial number

The serial number of your watch is engraved on the back of the case.

1991 - 2000

2001 - 2010

D = 2001
E = 2002
F = 2003
G = 2004
H = 2005
I = 2006
J = 2007
K = 2008
L = 2009
M = 2010

Including Date Codes and Date Symbols

1875 - Present

New York and Switzerland

In 1875, Joseph Bulova, a Bohemian immigrant, started the J. Bulova Company in a store on Maiden Lane in Lower Manhattan. Begun as a wholesale jeweler, the company produced small table clocks and good-quality pocket watches, By 1912, driven by the increased demand for wristwatches, Bulova built a factory in Bienne, Switzerland that was capable of mass-producing fully-jeweled wristwatch movements in large numbers. For the most part, these movements were cased and timed in the USA before shipment to retailers. Under Joseph Bulova's guidance, Bulova became a world-leader in the mass production of reliable, good-quality wristwatches.

Bulova sold relatively few pocket watches (compared to their huge production of wristwatches), though they did produce a few basic pocket watch models in the 30's, 40's and 50's. The ultra-thin 'Phantom' model, produced in the 1920's, was a finely-made, platinum-cased pocket watch that is prized by collectors today.

A Company of 'Firsts'

Bulova was an innovative company, and can be credited with many industry 'firsts.' They were the first watch or clock company to broadcast and advertise on the radio, and later became the first to show a commercial on television. They were the first watch company to market watches specifically to women, and the first company to open a school for disabled veterans that provided them with care, employment opportunities, and a marketable skill after the war (more below).

The Joseph Bulova School of Watchmaking

One of Bulova's most significant contributions to the world of horology was the creation of the Joseph Bulova School of Watchmaking, founded in 1945 by Joseph Bulova's son Arde Bulova (then Chairman of the Board). Arde Bulova 'wished to repay, in some small measure, the sacrifice and service of returning disabled veterans after the Second World War.'*

The Bulova school helped train an entire generation of American watchmakers. The school provided tuition-free education to teach disabled servicemen the skills of watchmaking 'under the most expert supervision and with an all-inclusive curriculum in a pleasant environment where similar interests and problems developed a close-knit, affable group of men working toward common goals.' *

By the early 50's, as the demand for skilled watchmakers increased in America, the Bulova school opened its doors to disabled civilians as well, and graduates of the Bulova school went on to pursue meaningful careers as not only watchmakers, but also as instrument makers, instrument repairers, micro-machinists, and other trades requiring the precision skills and dexterity of a watchmaker. Over 1500 jewelers pledged to hire Bulova graduates, so employment upon graduation was assured.

The school provided a well-equipped facility for its disabled students, and was a pioneer of 'accessibility' with automatic doors and extra-wide elevators. Facilities included a medical department on school premises which housed an infirmary, dispensary and exercise room. The services of a physician, physical therapist, full-time registered nurse and a 'physical medicine consultant' were provided free to the students. The school also housed an extensive horological library, recreation facilities, and a full kitchen and dining room.

The school received its financial support from the Joseph Bulova Foundation.

* 'Joseph Bulova School of Watchmaking Training Manual', 9th edition, pub. 1968.

Bulova Innovations:

In the early 1920s, Bulova constructed an astronomical observatory atop a skyscraper in mid-town Manhattan (at 580 Fifth Avenue) for the accurate measurement of sidereal time. On the top floor of the Observatory an expert mathematician took readings that were simultaneously recorded on a chronograph located in the lower floors of the building. There, the Setting and Timing units used the data to set the time on all of the company's timepieces in the most accurate way possible.

The company was also very innovative with its advertising and marketing. In 1926 Bulova sponsored the first nationally broadcast radio commercial, signaling the hour with 'At the tone, its 8 o'clock BULOVA time.' Again in 1941 Bulova proved itself as an advertising innovator when it ran the world's first TV commercial: a simple ad showing an outline of the United States with a superimposed Bulova clock and the caption 'America Runs on Bulova Time'. The ad appeared at the start of a broadcast of a Brooklyn Dodgers - Philadelphia Phillies game and the cost of the ad was $9.

Accutron: The World's First Electronic Watch

Beginning in 1952, Bulova began exploring and developing technologies that would create the first revolutionary change in timekeeping technology in over 300 years: the Accutron. Using a vibrating tuning fork rather than an oscillating mechanical balance as its time reference allowed the Accutron to achieve unparalleled accuracy of +/- 2 seconds per day. In about 1958 at the behest of NASA, Bulova applied the Accutron technology to devices which could be used for precision timing on satellites. Engineers and scientists were unsure if a mechanical timekeeping device would work properly in zero-gravity, so it was desired to have both the reliability and accuracy of the electronic Accutron movement.

More than 4 million Accutron watches were produced until Bulova ceased production in 1977, due to the increased availability and popularity of inexpensive quartz movements from Japanese manufacturers. Most Accutrons were produced as wristwatches, but Bulova also produced an Accutron pocket watch for a brief period in the 1970's. The Accutron was the first wristwatch certified for general use by railroad personnel and was also used aboard Air Force One.

Accutron watches are still quite popular with collectors, but parts are getting harder and harder to find (especially those pesky Accutron index wheels). While the modern Bulova company still produces watches which are sold under the Accutron brand-name, these watches no longer use the original Accutron tuning-fork movement (most are using ETA automatic movements).

Bulova in Space

Bulova has a long history as an important part of the US Space program. Bulova first worked with NASA on timing devices for the Vanguard I satellite in 1958, and continued to collaborate with NASA for the next several decades. Bulova and Omega competed to be chosen by NASA as the watch Apollo astronauts would wear on missions to the moon. Ultimately, the Omega Speedmaster Professional was chosen, but Accutron movements were used in instrument panel clocks and other timing instruments on the spacecraft itself, and in experiment packages left on the surface of the moon. Bulova also flew aboard Skylab, providing special timers which were launched aboard Skylab in 1973.

Modern Bulova Watches

To the best of our knowledge, the Bulova brand is currently owned by Citizen who still produces watches under the Bulova name. These watches have no connection (other than brand name) to the mechanical watches produced by the original Bulova watch company.

Determine the Age of Your Bulova Watch:

Fossil Watch Serial Number Search Tool

In 1924, Bulova started using a system of date 'symbols' on their movements. These date symbols can be used to date pre-1950 Bulova watches. Though some Bulova watches have serial numbers on the movements, we do not know of a way to date a Bulova watch using the serial number.

Table of Bulova Date Symbols: 1924 - 1949

Fossil Watch Serial Number Search By Name

Marks indicating age of Bulova movements

YearDate Symbol
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
YearDate Symbol
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
194646
194747
194848
1949J9

Table of Bulova Date Codes: 1950 - 1999

After 1949, Bulova used a 2-digit date-code which was stamped on the case back (usually near the serial number) and sometimes also on the movement (usually near the set-screw).

The first digit indicates the decade and the second indicates the year.

For example, date code L5 = 1955, date code P2 = 1982.

LMNPT
019501960197019801990
119511961197119811991
219521962197219821992
319531963197319831993
419541964197419841994
519551965197519851995
619561966197619861996
719571967197719871997
819581968197819881998
919591969197919891999

Fossil Watch Serial Number Lookup

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