QuicksilverQuicksilver is another name for the chemical element mercury. Literally "living silver", from mercury's silver appearance and its unusual (for a metal) liquidity at room temperature. Many products and characters have been named Quicksilver to suggest power, fluidity, and style:
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Many products and characters have been named Quicksilver to suggest power, fluidity, and style:. According to foundation documentation, the Rolex, SA company can never be sold, nor traded on any stock market. Literally "living silver", from mercury's silver appearance and its unusual (for a metal) liquidity at room temperature. In fact, it is a foundation initiated and originally funded by Hans Wilsdorf and the Aegler family. Quicksilver is another name for the chemical element mercury. Rolex, SA, the current company name, is not a public corporation. Quicksilver, a type of ultralight aircraft that was very popular in the 1980's. Even the self-winding mechanical design is often replicated using standard, high-quality swiss-made movements (most often those of ETA[1]), resulting in fakes that laymen will find difficult to distinguish from the originals. Quicksilver, the gun Vincent Valentine has equipped when you first gain him as a playable character in Final Fantasy VII. By some accounts, over 75% of all fake watches produced annually are copies of Rolex designs. Quicksilver, a bluegrass music band lead by Doyle Lawson. In July 2005, in Rome, it was possible to buy a replica Datejust for 20 Euros. Quicksilver Messenger Service, an influential 1960s psychedelic rock band from San Francisco, California. These fakes are mainly produced in China and Taiwan — and retail anywhere from $5 to an upwards of $1000 for replicas fabricated with solid gold. Quicksilver Software, a computer games company based in Irvine, California. Like many high-priced, brand-name accessories, Rolex watches are often counterfeited and sold in markets around the world that cater to tourists. Quicksilver, a character in the cartoon series Silverhawks. The primary types of Rolex bracelets include the Jubilee, Oyster and the President. Quicksilver, a novel substance in The Invisible Man that has the ability to bend light, making things invisible. The third line in the Rolex empire is the lesser expensive, but high quality, Tudor brand. Quiksilver [sic], a clothing brand specialized in surfing and winter sports. Dressy designs usually fall under the sister brand called Cellini. Quicksilver, a free computer application for Mac OS X by Blacktree Software that allows the user to use the keyboard to rapidly launch other applications, manipulate files, send email, etc. Most Rolex watches have a case design called the Oyster. Quicksilver, a movie starring Kevin Bacon, Jami Gertz, Paul Rodriguez, Rudy Ramos, and Laurence Fishburne and directed by Tom Donnelly. Among modern Rolex watches are the Air-King, Datejust, GMT Master/GMT II, Submariner, Sea-Dweller, Daytona Cosmograph, Day-Date, Oyster Perpetual and Yacht-Master. Quicksilver, a role-playing game by Jeff and Amanda Dee. In the early EON production Bond films, Commander Bond was seen to wear a Rolex Submariner. Quicksilver, a novel by Neal Stephenson. On the more glamorous side, Ian Fleming's James Bond character wore a Rolex Oyster Perpetual in the series of spy novels. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, he first appeared in X-Men #4 (1962). The Explorer and Explorer II were developed specifically for explorers who would navigate rough terrain — such as the world famous Everest Expeditions. Quicksilver, a superhero in the Marvel Comics universe, his superhuman ability being super-speed and reflexes. Another is the GMT Master, originally developed at the request of Pan Am Airways, to assist pilots in transcontinental flights. This watch featured a helium release valve, co-invented with Swiss watchmaker Doxa, to dispense helium during decompression. Sports models include the Oyster Perpetual Sea Dweller 2000 in 1971. Rolex has also made a reputation in watches suitable for the extremes of deep-sea diving, aviation and mountain climbing. The watch survived and tested as having kept perfect time during its descent and ascent. Wilsdorf even went so far as to have a specially made Rolex watch attached to the side of the Trieste bathyscaphe, which went to the bottom of the Mariana Trench. Rolex was also the first watch company to create a truly waterproof watch — another milestone from novelty to functional timepiece. This not only made watch-winding unnecessary, but eliminated the problem of over-winding a watch and harming its mechanism. The first self-winding Rolex watch was offered to the public in 1931, powered by an internal mechanism that used the movement of the wearer's arm. Although Rolex has made very few quartz models for its Oyster line, the company's engineers were instrumental in design and implementation of the technology during the early 1970s. Another little known fact is that Rolex participated in the development of the original quartz watch movements. To date, Rolex still holds the record for the most certified chronometer movements in the category of wristwatches. Among the company's innovations are the first self-winding watch; the first waterproof watch case; the first wristwatch with a date on the dial; the first watch to show two timezones at once; and most importantly the first watchmakers to earn the coveted chronometer certification for a wristwatch. It was later changed to Montres Rolex, SA and finally Rolex, SA. The company name was offically changed to the Rolex Watch Company during 1919. Wilsdorf was said to desire his watch brand's name to be easily pronouncable in any language. It is thought this change was part of a drive to popularize wristwatches, which at the time were still considered a novelty largely for women (pocket watches were more common). The company name Rolex was officially registered on 15 November 1915. From that time to the present, Rolex has been headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, though the company owns facilities in other cities (Bienne, etc) and continents (North America, Asia, Australia, etc). Wilsdorf wanted his watches to be affordable, but taxes and export duties on the case metals (silver and gold) were driving costs up. The Wilsdorf & Davis company moved out of Great Britain in 1912. One story, which was never confirmed by Wilsdorf, is that the word "Rolex" came from the French phrase horlogerie exquise, meaning exquisite watch industry. The word was made up, but its origin is obscure. Hans Wilsdorf registered the trademark name "Rolex" in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland during 1908. The earliest watches from the firm of Wilsdorf and Davis are usually marked "W&D" – inside the caseback only. These early wristwatches were then sold to jewellers, who then put their own names on the dial. They originally imported Hermann Aegler's Swiss movements to England and placed them in quality cases made by Dennison and others. Wilsdorf & Davis was the original name of what later became the Rolex Watch Company. Contrary to popular belief, Hans Wilsdorf was neither Swiss, nor a watchmaker. Alfred Davis. Hans Wilsdorf and his brother-in-law, Mr. The Rolex, SA company was founded in 1905 by Mr. Although a symbol of success, Rolex has earned its strong reputation through innovations in design and function over many decades. The watches have become status symbols of the rich and famous — as well as the upwardly-mobile career-minded individual. dollars). Rolex is a brand of Swiss wristwatches and accessories renowned for their quality and exclusivity, as well as their cost (from a few thousand to more than one hundred thousand U.S. ISBN 0-9709514-2-6. Charles, The ROLEX Reference Guide - 4th Edition, Leap Enterprises (Self-published), 2003. Jarman, T. ISBN 0-9723133-0-3. Brozek, John E., The Rolex Report, InfoQuest Publishing, Inc (Self-published), 2004. ISBN 0-7643-0011-3. & Hess, Jeffrey P., The Best of Times Rolex Wristwatches An Unauthorized History, Schiffer Publishing Limited, 1996. Dowling, James M. |