Monday, December 3, 2018

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

That’s right, this is an actual review of the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel, this very latest $99,000 halo-piece from La Chaux-de-Fonds. First things first, I have to say, kudos to Ulysse Nardin for being good sports and sending their latest tourbillon out for a review after I was rather critical about its presentation in the news article where we debuted this piece a couple weeks back. It was Stéphane, the Head of Research and Innovation at Ulysse Nardin who commented below the article to explain a few important details that were missing from the original press release and I did really appreciate that. Without further ado, let’s cut to the chase.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Two Different Ways Of Appreciating An Ultra High-End Watch

As is the case for any halo watch, there are two main and very different aspects to the appreciation of such a top-shelf exercise in fine watchmaking. First, there is the strictly technical aspect, where we lift the watch close to the loupe in front of our eyes or we crop deep into the macro photographs, all in an effort to understand and to appreciate the creative effort and engineering work that has gone into its creation. Second, there is the actual, real-world experience, when such a watch gets taken out into the real world, full of… well, everything. Exciting is the word I’m looking for because at this point the watch is no longer up close to our face, but down on our wrist and all we can do is catch glimpses of it as it performs its essential function: keeping and telling time. This real-world take is a completely different and indeed very special experience. I am at odds with which element to start, but I figure it’s best to gain an appreciation of its fine details and bold engineering first and with that in mind, learn what it was like to wear such a watch for weeks on end out and about in a metropolitan world.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

White Gold & Lots Of Sapphire

At 44mm wide, the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel is a wide watch that compensates for its substantial diameter with an impressively thin profile. Irrespective of all that’s going on, the Free Wheel is a thin watch by the standards of any watch, not just comparably complicated ones. The case-back is slightly “bubbled” and the lugs are angled downwards steeply, so rather than a pointless exact measurement of thickness I’ll say that it feels, looks, and wears a little thinner than a Rolex Submariner on the wrist. It is wider and longer though. The case comes with the brand’s trademark triple lug design and while those could normally steal the show as far as exterior elements are concerned, the real showstopper here is the sapphire “cap” that pans across the top of the watch and reaches all the way down into an extremely thin, 18ct white gold case profile. It’s like a wrist-vivarium with a selection of highly exotic things kept safely and exhibited proudly within. It creates an airy look and feel, keeping the physical and aesthetic weight of the watch at an absolute minimum.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The massive sapphire front and side element also let a lot of light into the case and onto the many different components that appear to be sparkling with joy now that they are not hidden underneath a dial or a funky arrangement of plates and bridges. Thankfully, the sapphire piece appears to be amply AR-coated and so – despite its noticeably domed front – all components are easy to appreciate from afar or up close, without the annoying hindrance of excessive reflections.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

A fun part of the watch is how you can see (on the image below) the white gold case glued to the sapphire cap from the inside. It sort of reminds me of how diamonds are held secure by their gold settings. The two lugs on the side are fully polished, including the heads of the screws that appear to hold the strap secure, while the center portions of the lug structures are vertically brushed. The crown exhibits comparable complexity with its brushed and polished parts. It often happens, and this piece is no different: on such a complicated watch, where there is so much going on to draw one’s eyes, certain components such as the case or crown often get overlooked. Even if, upon a closer look, one would rightly shiver at the thought of machining and engraving a piece as complex as that crown on its own. Not to mention the polish that is to be applied between the flanks and the brushed surface treatment on the higher parts. Even the aforementioned screws in the lugs have beveled and polished outer edges; these aren’t just some screws that came in by the hundreds from a supplier. No, these appear to have been finished to the same standards as much smaller screws are inside properly high-end movements. Apparently, placing such feats well on show really is the theme of this watch, down to such details. They really didn’t hold back on anything and while that sounds absolutely normal and expectable, it is not always the case.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

…That Dial Though!

All these, however, pale in significance when compared to the dial and its many shiny, contrasting, mind-tingling components. This is where the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel really stands out. A lot of it appears self-explanatory upon first sight – but it’s one of those things where the more you know, the more you can appreciate how much you actually don’t understand. As far as indications go, you get hours and minutes in the middle, indicated by two very large and very bold hands that have never ever failed to stand out against the dial – other issues I did experience with legibility, but more on that later. You also get a one-minute tourbillon at the 6 o’clock position of the dial; this doesn’t hack so you can’t really use it as a seconds indicator all that much, but it’s still there to give you a rough idea if you really want to time something within a minute. Last, but definitely not least, there is a power reserve indicator at the 4 o’clock position of the dial that, just like the tourbillon, is standing there all on its own, without any apparent connection to any moving parts whatsoever.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

This latter feature, the fact these parts stand free, adds tremendously to the overall look and impression of these components, as well the entire watch itself. We have seen countless flying tourbillons and yet more power reserve indicators, but for them to be just sticking out of a dial like that shows them in a completely new light. The tourbillon includes Ulysse Nardin’s lubrication-free silicon affair for the escapement assembly – namely the escapement wheel, pallet fork, and its spider web-like structure. Take a look at how this cool tourbillon works with the video below.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

To better understand the Free Wheel concept, let me quote Stéphane von Gunten, Head of Research & Innovation at Ulysse Nardin who kindly chimed in on the comments under my news article with an explanation that could only ever come from a modern watchmaker:

“The gear train on the left of the watch, between 8 and 10 o’clock, is a so-called “differential” and “demultiplifier” gear system. It is used to read the rotational information from and between (in and out) the two [mainspring] barrels and to reduce the speed in order to generate the correct rotational angle towards the power reserve indicator. The power reserve indicator is thus situated at 4 o’clock and is actuated by a double rake element underneath the dial, close to the Tourbillon area. All this gear train [the one on the left side of the dial] is composed of three levels of double planetary pinions, allowing to convert the 40 turns of the barrel-stack to the 270 degrees power reserve indication. Like the energy transfer that comes from the barrels to the Tourbillon, underneath the dial, this marvelous movement is kind of a tribute to “Mysterious Clocks.” It is the basic concept behind all of that. Showing the “best” elements of the movement – barrels, demultiplifier gear train, power reserve indicator and the Tourbillon with our Ulysse Anchor constant force escapement – is a super mix between the technics and the aesthetics of this high-end watch.”

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Here is a closer look at the left-hand side component group that Stéphane referred to in his comment. This is the differential and demultiplifier, the three-level component group that essentially is a mechanical device that divides 40 into 0.75. That is forty turns on the mainspring barrels into 3/4 of a turn of the power reserve indicator. Better still – and I did need a loupe and proper macro photography to determine this – all the components are exquisitely finished. I almost (almost!) got tricked into thinking that there really wasn’t that much to be seen here, and unless you have truly excellent near-sight, that is more or less true. But take a high-quality loupe or some macro shots and boy, will your experience change dramatically. I cannot really describe how thin the bevelled edges are on the arms of these wheels, or how even the mirror polish is on their top surfaces – but it really is top-tier work, simply performed on a scale that is all the more smaller than what we see on plates and bridges and larger wheels. The top of the boomerang-shaped bridge has a frosted finish but its edges are nevertheless polished – with the dark screws and shiny surfaces nearby, this creates an unquestionably high-end look.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Understandably not completely free from distortions, the side view the sapphire cap of the watch provides is really very cool too. The three-dimensionality of high-end watches is frequently under-appreciated or, worse still ignored entirely. Here you at least get a somewhat better understanding of what’s going on and how much of a (very enjoyable) challenge it must have been for the Ulysse Nardin team to engineer these beautifully finished wheels onto and into one another. Top-tier work both in complexity and refinement, the sort of stuff that, I think, we will never ever see the trickle down into more affordable price segments – it will always be reserved for the mid-five figures and up. Because unlike many other previously high-end and novel solutions, like forged carbon cases or extra-long power reserves and whatnot that we did see make their way into genuinely affordable price tiers, this combination of complexity and refinement does not bode well with the concept of the scale of economics. Not a complaint, just an observation.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The dial has an interesting gazillion-hole pattern to it – if you have trypophobia, you will probably not want to look at it with a loupe too long. Frankly, this pattern I could take it or leave it. It doesn’t move me in any way, other than that I can appreciate the challenge of finding a texture that works well with the rest of the design, without paling in its looks or overpowering the overall aesthetic of the watch. The rose gold version of the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel has a solid dial with a slate or earth-like texture to it that I prefer to this one, but that really is just down to personal preference.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The hands, as I had already mentioned, are insanely large. They even have a bit of black lume in the center. As lume, it is absolutely worthless unless you go from the brightest summer noon outdoors into the darkest room possible, but they do a great job at making the hands stand out against the super busy backdrop of black and white, shiny and matte surfaces that we see scattered all across the face of the Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel. The sheer size of the hands also tells me that this is a strong movement, capable of moving these beasts around all day.

Speaking of the movement, the Ulysse Nardin UN-176 caliber was designed in-house, according to the manufacture. It features a 170-hour power reserve and runs at 18,000 vph, a slow beat so you can really see that tourbillon breathe. Let’s see what little there is to be seen on the case-back side of it.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The case-back, as I mentioned above, is slightly, but noticeably domed outwards, towards the wrist. Its massive sapphire crystal has a smooth surface and it merges with the white gold frame seamlessly. Funnily enough, while the original launch document referenced this as a place where there was “nothing to see,” this side of the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel actually is pretty exciting too! You’ll find some absolutely massive jewels that will give you a rough idea on the layout of some of the parts hidden on the dial side. I especially liked the little, rounded cut-outs where, at the 6 o’clock position, I could see a small and large wheel merging – this is where the tourbillon gets its drive and you’ll see a closer look on the image just below. On the upper half of the case-back, visible through similar cut-outs, I could see part of the winding mechanism revealed.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The texture of the large plate covering all of the back of the watch and hence filling the entire case-back is like miniaturized concrete. In harsh light like directly above it really shows its dense and gritty texture, while in softer light (as on the image further above) it looks soft and easy on the eyes. An obscure detail is the tiny “Ulysse Nardin Certified,” something that becomes all the more confusing once you look at its logo with a lonely pine tree standing in a field with a bright star above it. I have no idea of its meaning today and I doubt it will be any easier to figure out a hundred years from now – when we’ll be all gone but this watch will still be around, dazzling and amazing people that mechanical watchmaking was this awesome in the early 2000s. That, I think, is pretty cool. And unintelligible details like this little countryside scenery will make these watches that much more charming in the eyes of future-dwellers.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Wearing Experience

Nearly 3,000 words into it and finally we have arrived at this point… I did mean to pay my dues and explain the technical details of this watch before I told you how it actually feels on the wrist… But wow, there was even more to say than I had anticipated. Anyhow, in short, it is both more exciting and, in a few ways, more restrained than I had anticipated. I had the privilege and good fortune to wear this incredible piece for a number of weeks out and about, running errands and so on… And it is at times like these when one gets to discover what a watch really looks and feels like.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The laser sharp, hard-lit macro photography that I had used for most of this article was to show the extremely fine and minute details in a crisper way, hopefully making them easier to appreciate. In the real world though, on the wrist, the watch appears a lot more “velvety,” a lot like how it looks on the image above. There is a good separation between the different dial components. The glass looks crystal clear, appearing with just a tiny bit of presence as it encapsulates the precious-looking components underneath. The case is beautifully made, with soft-polished lugs and barely noticeable brushed surfaces. The dial – with its holes – is prominent and one does get hung up on it from time to time, but it hardly ever does steal the show.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

At times I’d go so far as to say that the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel looks a lot like a normal watch. Like on the image above. At this time none of the polished edges reflect light sharply. The sapphire cap cannot really be perceived, the silicon parts in the tourbillon do not show up in bright purple and blue, and the overall layout looks pretty straightforward, really – strictly by the standards of this watch and how it can appear at other times.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Flick your wrist a tiny little bit though and the whole thing comes alive. Suddenly there’s immense depth, different parts of the components shimmer with light at the tiniest movement and the whole thing starts to look as expensive as it actually is. Over the weeks I could really appreciate this transformation, especially since knowing when and how it happens (depending on a million things such as amount, type and temperature of light, the reflection of the world around me at the time (open skies, indoors, whatever), the distance at which I am looking at the watch, and the amount of time I am looking at it. And sure, similar things happen with a regular luxury watch if it’s made well enough… But the scale and quantity of these transformations and exquisite details so neatly exposed is what propels the Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel into haute horlogerie territory. Where your money goes in this instance is the absolute overkill in the number of neat details (think of the bevelled edges on the tiny wheels, the unique surface treatments, the massive sapphire cap, the neatly detailed white gold case and so on). Sure, there are more shouty luxury watches at this near-6-figure segment in terms of sheer visual complexity – you can get literally a dozen different indications on a dial if you really insist – but don’t forget that the point of this watch is the Free Wheel concept, where part of the fun is how part of the components have been hidden away.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

When I look at this watch, I see an aquarium – for total nerds, I’ll say that it’s actually a terrarium, for it has no water in it – a glass display that safeguards and, at the same time, exhibits a selection of naturally beautiful things. I feel as though I could easily open up the case and fiddle with these very numerable parts, but I shiver right after entertaining that thought for I know I’d cause irreparable damage to those tiny little organisms. There is, I find, a rare, organic beauty to this watch. Some things are beautifully and proudly displayed, others work mysteriously in the background, hidden away from the human eye and mind alike.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The only thing to be aware of is that this is an expensive watch of which everyone can tell is expensive – even from afar. At times that’s what people buying these watches want, but some other times discretion is what matters. It would be idiotic to mention this aspect as a downside of the Tourbillon Free Wheel; anyone who buys an open-dial watch and moans that it isn’t discrete enough clearly loves to make unreasonable expectations. I guess what I am trying to say is that while I do very much enjoy all the brilliant details of the Free Wheel, I at times wished it was only me who could see them… And look at them for more than 10-20 seconds while out in the wild without looking like a total schmuck that’s eyeing his expensive-looking watch for a long time. Discretion, then, is not a strong point of the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel and while normally I wouldn’t even think of mentioning this element on a watch of this style and caliber, I do so here because once you appreciate the elegance of the layout and design, you won’t see this as an attention-grabbing effort in ultra-luxury, but rather as a labor of love put on display.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

To return to some more realistic expectations, I do wish that the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel came in a smaller case. I wish that partly because I have narrow wrists and partly because I look at that black, feature-less band around the dial and think to myself: “that is exactly how much narrower I wish it was!” With a thickness of just over 13mm, having this come in at 42mm would not have been outrageous at all. Maybe the sapphire cap is the reason for this extension – if you scroll up, you’ll see how it isn’t a perfect box-shape but rather a dome that slopes downwards at its edges. That said, it will wear and look really good on those fortunate owners with a somewhat thicker wrist than my 17.5 cm (6.75in) thick wrist; but even so, I wish this outer ring had a minute track on it. Strangely, I had no trouble reading the time with the accuracy required by the sort of person who routinely buys watches priced at or above $99,000, but I felt I needed some point of reference when I was setting the time on the watch.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

A wish, if I could have one, is this. I would absolutely love to see this dial and movement in a more ordinary case with a regular sapphire front, coming in at 42mm wide and with regular lugs. This dial with all these features looking back at me from a more wearable sized and classically styled watch that came in at a price point closer to Ulysse Nardin’s other tourbillons (closer to $50k rather than $100k) I think would do incredibly well. Now that I have gotten to look at and appreciate the many truly beautiful details that have been hidden all along in the components so prominently displayed on the face of this watch, I have really grown to appreciate the Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel on another level. The layout is the lasting sort of fun, and so is interacting with the watch and seeing the keyless works turn and the truly flying tourbillon rotate on its own.

I am absolutely sure that those who get one of these will end up wearing it a lot because it is a lastingly entertaining watch to wear with countless details to appreciate. It is a piece of modern watchmaking with so much of what UN knows thrown at it: super long power reserve, fancy, ultra-modern silicon escapement, flying tourbillon, sapphire, and white gold case, completely unique movement design and so on… And all that is packaged in a way that I’m sure will resonate with some – and will not with others. In short, I hope to see more iterations of this face, especially one in a more toned-down package at a competitive price.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Why would anyone buy the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel? I think the reason is basically exactly the same as why one would support an unknown (but otherwise really quite great) painter: out of appreciation and a personal resonance with the art itself. There are six-figure watches that you can own and sell for the same amount as you paid for it – select Richard Mille and factory-set Rolexes spring to mind along with a few obscure models that have a total fan base of 10 collectors when only 8 were made. But you don’t need to shop around for long to realize how some of the watch snob-favored references take a hit in value all the same when the game of musical chairs ends. What I’m trying to say is that this watch will make a couple dozen collectors happy in the world who tried it on and interacted with it and have consequently fallen in love with it. Despite the tremendous amount of money that it costs and the fact that it has a lot of work put into it, this will be a purchase made with the heart first and the mind second – not the other way around. And that’s all good because the mind will ultimately find a lot to enjoy.

Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

What I think it takes for the Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel to be successful is to get it into the hands of enough prospective buyers, let them view its fine details, comprehend its novel functioning and, perhaps most importantly, interact with it. Once enough of them sees the face of the watch come to life at the turn of the crown and appreciates the novel network of exotic parts, the Free Wheel will see no trouble finding its customers. The Ulysse Nardin Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel in white gold is priced at $99,000 and you can find some basic information about it on the Ulysse Nardin website.

Necessary Data
>Brand: Ulysse Nardin
>Model: Executive Tourbillon Free Wheel
>Price: $99,000
>Size: 44 wide, 13.50mm thick
>Would reviewer personally wear it: Yes, duh!
>Friend we’d recommend it to first: Big wrist, big income, big love for fine mechanics. In reverse order.
>Best characteristic of watch: Novel approach, great execution, no sense of restraint or compromise.
>Worst characteristic of watch: I wish this dial and movement would also come in a ~42mm regular case at around half the price. I’d sell a kidney for that.



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Just Because: The Unique Watches Of Vacheron Constantin’s Les Cabinotiers ‘Mécaniques Sauvages’ Collection

Mécaniques Sauvages is a bespoke collection inspired by wild animals. From rhinos and monkeys to tigers, eagles, and more, the line is comprised of over twenty pieces but the following is what was available after Vacheron’s most ardent collectors had a chance to see the new collection. Many of the watches were sold upon viewing, with the new owners asking the watches not be subject to press photography. Below we have examples of incredible engraving, painstaking enamel work, and impressive haute horology watchmaking. This is Vacheron Constantin creating niche expressions (all of these pieces are one-of-one creations) of their core talents, be it cutting edge or entirely old-school.



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Sunday, December 2, 2018

Glashütte‘s Energy in View: The new Patria Power Reserve from Tutima Glashütte

Exquisite and enriched with an additional complication: the new Patria Power Reserve augments the Patria collection by adding a model with a power-reserve display at “9 o’clock”.

Learn more about the new Patria Power Reserve:  https://tutima.com/watches/patria/

Arcing through a 300° angle and distinguished by its understated bicolour markings, the power-reserve indicator shows how much energy remains in the barrel to power this hand-wound watch. With this new complication, the Patria Power Reserve joins the ranks of fine manufacture timepieces that exemplify the savoir-faire of its Glashütte-based brand.

This new wristwatch’s classical 43-mm rose gold case is styled very much like the case of the strictly limited minute repeater. The family resemblance continues inside the newcomer’s case because hand-wound Caliber Tutima 618, which amasses a 65-hour power reserve and was specially developed at the manufacture in Glashütte, is derived from the basic movement of the complicated HOMMAGE.

Learn more about the new Patria Power Reserve:  https://tutima.com/watches/patria/

The debutante’s power-reserve function relies on the perfectly harmonious interplay of 34 additional components. The elements in this subassembly, which are elaborately decorated and ennobled by hand, bear witness to the skilful artistry of the watchmakers who craft them. A special feature: a planetary wheel and disc provide motive force for the complication.

The two steel winding wheels and the ratchet with its arcing steel spring are visible through a pane of sapphire crystal in the back of the case. The pierced and finely finished balance cock offers an unobstructed view of Tutima’s own oscillating system. With 26 bearing rubies, this watch boasts six jewels more than its sister model.

Learn more about the new Patria Power Reserve:  https://tutima.com/watches/patria/

Manually crafted hands made of solid 18 karat rose gold turn above the finely silver-plated dial and accentuate this watch’s noble and understated styling while simultaneously radiating the brilliance of the art of watchmaking as practiced in Glashütte. The new Patria Power Reserve is worn with a hand-sewn alligator-leather strap secured by a golden tang buckle.

Tutima Glashütte is manufacture of the year 2018! Click here to learn more.

 



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Introducing: The H. Moser & Cie. Heritage Bucherer Blue Editions And Endeavour Diamonds Bucherer Blue Editions (Live Pics & Pricing)

What’s immediately notable about both of these editions is that they don’t seem to follow the script set forth for Bucherer Blue Editions, namely, the incorporation of blue colors and accents in their design. At least, at first they don’t appear to. If you turn the watches over, you’ll see that the balance wheels, balance bridges, and rotors of both the men’s and the ladies’ piece have been blued in-house by Bucherer. The linings of the straps also have a blue color to them. Moser is notable among smaller independent brands – they make just 1,500 watches per year – for making their own escapements in-house through their sister company Precision Engineering AG. Actually, they produce about 50,000 balance springs annually (with a capacity to ramp up to 200,000) and are a significant, if silent, supplier to high-end watch brands in Switzerland. The only client that they are allowed to talk about publicly is MB&F.



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Saturday, December 1, 2018

This Week in Watches – December 1, 2018

Greetings on this first day of December! The holiday season is now officially in full swing everywhere (I say that as my European wife chided me last weekend for putting up the Christmas tree while still in November – the nerve of Americans!) and we are back with This Week in Watches. The last week of November wasn’t overly notable for news, but there were some stories worth mentioning on TWIW. Oh, and RJ was good enough to chime in on the new Cartier and with some Omega news. But first…

SalonQP(lease make some changes)

At the end of the prior week, RJ and I flew to jolly old England to take in the annual SalonQP exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in London and it was… I’m just going to skip the bludgeoning that local watch collectors, journalists and we could serve up as it would be too easy. The show was so small (it spanned 1.5 of 3 floors and that’s a stretch due to some liberal booth spacing) and the attendance, from our view, seemed thin at best. Look, with Hearst Uk now aboard, a new exhibition director, and what we heard was the final year of a multi-year contract at the Saatchi, we truly hope for big changes next year. I get it that exhibitions are a tough sale in any category these days (unless, seemingly, you’re involved in some arcane industry that packs thousands of busy booths into 15 halls in one of Germany’s ridiculous Messe’s…), but it’s London for goodness sake and it’s before Christmas. Have the boutiques in London become so nice that people don’t need to go elsewhere? Maybe, but QP was supposed to be about providing a no-pressure environment for potential buyers to handle watches. I’ve said many times that SalonQP could and should be my very favorite event – we TRULY hope that things change next year or we fear that it may become the stuff of legend.

Ulysse Nardin 42MM Diver – I Want to Like It

I’ll admit that Ulysse Nardin doesn’t offer much that excites me. A lot of their watches look like they’d be at home with the “Camp David” set and while that’s a fine aesthetic, it’s just not me. Yes, they do offer some nice classic pieces, but I recall the days of the Copernicus and love many of their vintage pieces. So, when I saw that the brand released a new diver this week (another Pre-SIHH reveal), I was intrigued. Upon closer inspection, we have a nicely designed 42mm diver with some cool details. An inward sloping bezel looks good along with a legible, and relatively unfussy dial. As for criticisms, placing the longitude and latitude of the brand’s manufacture on the dial looks a bit off and, honestly, reminds me of something a micro-brand might do to try and create some link to a legacy.  But – I can live with it.  Also, while some are frothing at the mouth over the mesh bracelet and hipster straight end links, I think it’s a misstep. Unless the clasp is something amazing, one can easily add decent aftermarket mesh. And, honestly, are we at the point where most brands are conceding to the fact that Rolex is one of the few that actually build a good dive bracelet? Moving on, it seems that UN chose to employ a Sellita SW300 and, I’d assume, added some finishing. Look, I’ve heard recent arguments about how we overvalue the use of an “in-house” movement and I tend to agree. Serviceability and reliability count for something and a new, unproven movement might not provide either. But…this new Ulysse Nardin comes in at 5,800 Euros which is a ton of cash. It’s frankly too much cash. Look, I really like the design of this watch, but I’d like it loads more at about 2,000 Euros less – then, it “coulda been a contender.”

This Week in Watches

Seiko and Another Limited Edition Presage

This week, Seiko dropped its new Presage Urushi Byakudan-Nuri Limited Edition ref. SPB085 just in time for the holidays. Apparently, if you say the name 5 times in a row at your local Seiko boutique, you can take one of these limited pieces home at a radical discount. That’s a poor joke, but what we have is another Seiko Presage featuring some incredible dial work – this time with layers of lacquer. Personally, I love the colors (meant to evoke the sky and moon just before dawn), but the mix of Arabic and Roman numerals seems a bit conflicted. This piece comes in at 2500 Euros and while that isn’t cheap, you can bet that the quality of work would cost multiples if it were coming from Switzerland. If you like the style, go have a look at one of the 2000 pieces Seiko has produced. We were there for the debut, so take a look at some hands-on images.

Speedmaster Apollo 8

New? Omega Speedmaster Apollo 8

Earlier this year in Basel, Omega showed us their new Speedmaster Dark Side of the Moon Apollo 8. Now, all Dark Side of the Moon models refer to Apollo 8, but they finally emphasized it with this particular model: a watch that has a special skeleton dial and movement. It’s different from the regular Dark Side of the Moon models, as this one has a hand-wound Lémania-based movement. There’s nothing new here, as we discussed it earlier this year in detail in one of our hands-on articles. So I was a little surprised to find a press release in my inbox last (Speedy) Tuesday, where Omega ‘releases’ the Speedmaster Dark Side of the Moon Apollo 8. I asked them why they basically re-released this watch half a year later again, but it seems it is now available at boutiques and (more important I guess), they made minor changes to the dial. I did my best to discover any differences, but I don’t see them. Perhaps it was more like a technical change. In any case, this watch that commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 8 mission (where mankind saw the far side of the moon for the first time), is now being delivered to the stores. I wasn’t too sure about the yellow accents at first, but I think it is a nice choice afterall, as white would make it a bit too monochrome. Omega did an amazing job on the decoration of the dial and movement and I am really warming up to this piece. Oh, and it is not a limited edition, so all the haters can buy one now.

This Week in Watches

Cartier Privé Tonneau Collection

It is almost time for the annual SIHH in Geneva, where brands from the Richemont Group and Audemars Piguet, Richard Mille, Parmigiani and a number of independent watchmakers show their novelties for 2019. One of the highlights of that show for me is the presentation by Cartier. Although I am not a Cartier owner, I do like that they have a well-structured collection and the ability to keep coming up with new watches that trigger my interest. Since it is roughly a month and a half to go until the show, the pre-SIHH releases (and embargos) are flooding our mailboxes already. Last week we received a pre-SIHH release from Cartier, introducing a number of Privé Tonneau watches. The design is based on an original Cartier tonneau-shaped watch from 1908 according to the press release. While it’s absolutely nothing for myself to own or wear, I do appreciate the design and boldness of these watches. The boldest of the bunch is definitely the Skeleton Dual Time Zone Tonneau, limited to 100 pieces each (in platinum and pink gold) that actually houses two movements per watch. Then there are two Tonneau watches for those who are less outgoing, in platinum (100 pieces) and pink gold. They contain just two hands, no date, and a large tonneau-shaped case on an alligator strap. I am definitely favouring the platinum two-hand model, which I am going to give a try in mid-January for sure.

That’s all for This Week in Watches, we’ll be back next week!



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Introducing: The Hamilton Khaki Navy Scuba Auto Gear Patrol Special Edition

This is a good-looking dive watch from a very well-known watchmaker, and it has an exclusive design that ties it back to a popular media brand that has long been an important voice in the online lifestyle game. The watch’s 40mm case size, and the fact that it comes with one of the Swatch Group’s souped up ETA-based movements with extra power reserve – the H-10 – make it a solid choice for those new to mechanical watches and readers interested in a really nice value proposition (and who isn’t interested in that?). I see nods to vintage dive-watch design, but also elements of modern sports watch design.



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