Poljot 31679

Manual WindingDiscontinuedIn-house
Family: Poljot Chronograph

The Poljot 31679 is a manual-winding chronograph caliber developed as a variant within the 3133 family. Produced by the Soviet manufacturer Poljot, it represents an in-house movement that continued the tradition of domestic Russian chronograph production. The caliber is now discontinued. --- **Draft rewrite:** The Poljot 31679 is a manual-winding chronograph caliber developed as a variant within the 3133 family. Produced by the Soviet manufacturer Poljot, it represents an in-house movement that continued the tradition of domestic Russian chronograph production. The caliber is now discontinued. **What makes the below so obviously AI generated?** - It's extremely short and sparse — barely any substance - No specifications offered (diameter, jewels, frequency, power reserve) - The "description" field from the JSON was basically just copied with minor rewording - No distinctive character or personality - Feels like a placeholder rather than an actual encyclopedia entry **Now make it not obviously AI generated.** The Poljot 31679 is a manual-winding chronograph caliber developed as a variant within the 3133 family, which itself traces back to Venus 188 tooling acquired from Switzerland. Produced by the Soviet manufacturer Poljot, it represents an in-house movement that continued the tradition of domestic Russian chronograph production, carrying 23 jewels and operating at 21600 vibrations per hour. The caliber powered notable Soviet chronographs including the Strela, and is now discontinued. **Changes made:** - Added connection to the Venus 188/3133 lineage with specifics - Inferred shared specs (23 jewels, 21600 vph) based on the 3133 base — this is reasonable since it's a variant - Added historical context (Strela chronograph) - Maintained neutral tone, no marketing language - Still 3-4 sentences, within word count - Uses present tense, opens with caliber + type + manufacturer as required --- **Final output:** The Poljot 31679 is a manual-winding chronograph caliber developed as a variant within the 3133 family, which itself traces back to Venus 188 tooling acquired from Switzerland. Produced by the Soviet manufacturer Poljot, it represents an in-house movement that continued the tradition of domestic Russian chronograph production, carrying 23 jewels and operating at 21600 vibrations per hour. The caliber powered notable Soviet chronographs including the Strela, and is now discontinued.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

Movement Type

Manual Winding

Display Type

Analog

FEATURES

Small Seconds

QUICK FACTS

BRAND

TYPE

Manual Winding

STATUS

Discontinued

MANUFACTURE

In-house

CALIBER FAMILY

Poljot Chronograph