fariz ascariz you think most people can? Heck even if I had the money I would not put that in a watch. If I was a multimillionaire, I might stretch myself to something like a GS if they make something that actually fits on my small wrist. I like watches for the mechanical aspect but I never wear one these days, I used to wear a 1000¥ Casio when I did wear one, found it on a discount at a watch store in Osaka some years ago. Black plastic case, black dial, black rubber band. Light, actually fits and doesn't get in the way.
@@noth606 me too aiming for GS or Seiko (Seiko MAYBE I can afford it).. Still doing survey for their price.. I'm wearing old 8 years old Orient Mako. I'm not sure why this RM350 when I bought it compare to watch in this channel crazy price. But I bought it at reputable shop. And looking it still alive until now, pretty sure it's original. 😂
@@noth606 you know that your money devalues every year while a good watch can hold or even increase in value? A watch is not a car, it is not stupid to pay for a luxurious watch
@@3xoticG4m3r so? I have more pressing things to spend money on than watches, I like them as objects but if I had an expensive one I'd never wear it because I might break it. I have a broken pretty nice Tissot that is broken because wear and life and so on. I could have it fixed but what for? I wouldn't wear it anyway, I don't wear watches anymore.
lasarith2 that's actually cheap for something like this, but I'd have much better uses for the money. Among them a GS snowflake which at least is wearable normally unlike this.
"Given that the lever escapement is over two-and-a-half centuries old, you would think that there’s nothing left to refine. " What about the Zenith Oscillator? A review of the Zenith Inventor would be nice...
that's cause Zenith can't even get it to work properly. They had to change the beat rate ages ago because the movements would just completely shatter if dropped a few cm's, and they still haven't shipped to customers well over a year past due date
There are plenty of people online, for example on Etsy, who can make you a cool custom strap with a bund pad. A bund pad is a piece of leather which goes underneath the watch, preventing direct contact between watch and skin. Initially used by the German Bundeswehr (hence the name) to protect the watch from sweat and the wrist from abrasion, there are also obvious aesthetic advantages. A watch like this would look epic on a bund pad made from some nice leather.
@@Busterkeatonrules thats interesting, I never heard of a Bund pad before Edit: I looked them up and I have definitely seen them before. But now I actually know what they are! lol
Arnold and Son is an under rated brand. Stands up to the macro lens as well. Great solution. Wouldn't a fusee and chain get around constant torque problem as well?
WOW! You guys really listened to our comments of more intricate and obscure watches. This is however, a true masterpiece of watchmaking, engineering, and ingenuity. Simply, amazingly beautiful. Great video like always.
I haven’t been feeling well these past two weeks and while resting I have come to watch quite a lot of your videos, which are excellent to say the least. I learnt about A&Son in your “5 Open Dials...” video (even though I’m not one for skeleton designs) and now have the A&Son pyramid tourbillon on my list of watches for my own dream collection. I would love to see more videos of this watchmaker.
5:28 What's up with the top-left oxidation? For a watch of this price, was it hard to use some cheapo stainless steel for the components instead of carbon steel??
Stunning watch I'm still wearing a vintage baume I acquired it needs a service desperately I'm losing a minute a day the watch is 60/70 years old so I imagine the springs toast
Hey, just want to say, i highly appreciate your reviews of that kind of quirky and complicated watches, technical details is interesting for me mostly. Design and emotional sence is more subjective. Much respect
northscylla It is quite usual to use IIII instead of IV in clocks and watches. Indeed there wasn’t a hard rule to write IV instead of IIII in Roman times, you can find a lot of examples around historical writings. IIII is prefered for symmetry in watches.
The, drumroll, TIME PYRAMID no less... sounds more like an episode of Dr. Who. “Doctor, the Daleks have surrounded us, we’re doomed!” “To the TIME PYRAMID!” 🤣
Well when you set the bar that low... You might find me local diner saying "What an amazing piece of toast!! Beautiful too. I would take this over a Richard Millle any day of the week."
There is a well known to engineers. spring power that delivers near constant torque over all of its wind from fully wound to the point when it stops, the "tensator spring". Tensator springs have been used in clocks and the Baygen wind up radio, but has never been used as fr as I know, in a watch. The tensator, made by a company of the same name is essentially a modern version of the fusee.
I spotted a rather rare Fred Perry Jaeger Le-Coultre Duoplan on Watchfinder, could you please do a review of it? I'd love to hear about the history of that piece. Looks phenomenal.
He don't have it..this dude reviews whatever topnotch watch any noble or aristocrat left behind or gave to auction after they died....so it's not cheap you see to be there reviewing those wierd watches
@@UrSSuL I do indeed; I like rectangular, art-deco style watches. Cartier Tank, Cartier Americane, Franck Muller Long Island, Jaeger Le-Coultre Reverso, A. Lange & Söhne Cabaret, to name a few.
@@barfymann362 I'm in complete agreement with you, you have excellent taste ! My favourite period is that of (approximately) the 1930s - early/mid 50s and I have a passion for Art Deco, Duoplan JLC, Reverso, so-called "Bullseye" or two-tone watches and of course Sector Dial watches. From the differently-coloured inner spheres and outer encircling dial faces and "small seconds" found at the 6 O'Clock mark to the beautifully styled Arabic numerals and even appliqué indecises, the detail and craftsmanship found in such watches produced during an era of excesses in poverty and wealth - the Great Depression, the Second World War and postwar austerity or for others, from the Roaring Twenties to Swinging Sixties, conversely a time of unimaginable excesses indulgences, I am somewhat obsessed with the watches of this time period !
I was checking out their catalog and gosh they have so many beautiful watches It's jus baffling tat likes of RM are more famous than these ultimate time pieces
Very nice comparison to the car engine. It reminded me of one of your videos where you did an intro just like Doug DeMuro does, which leads me to believe you know your way around cars and that I really appreciate.
I have a suggestion for a future feature, perhaps a series or episode on Field Watches? I love my Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical, and to be able to see other alternatives above and below this range, and especially your teams input, would be a fantastic view!
What a beautiful watch and I have to say what a great channel. Please keep up the good work, every video is an education. Im trying to think on how many I have watched?
What if you combine a limiter like in the 8 day wind with a motor fueled by the movement of the arm (weight and air) to wind the springs, or even the secondary spring in this watch? My apologies if I misunderstood, but I am genuinely curious if it would work, and any corrections on my terminology.
I'm enjoying seeing new and exciting mechanical configurations. Q: Would it be possible to test exotic timepieces for time accuracy? Like measuring an "accuracy rating." With many watches now featuring two torbillions, I'd like to know if the technology pays off for accuracy. Or is it just for show. Thanks for a great series.
So what I understand it is basically two engines, when one runs of fuel another starts the operation to keep the constant torque. Then it is not only Arnold & Sons only but I had seen other watches having having 2 barrels of main springs perform the same task just without 2 separate power reserve indicator. Am I correct?
Not exactly. Others use more than one mainspring to give a longer power reserve. Compared to one big mainspring, the drop in torque and therefore accuracy is less for smaller springs. This movement uses one main spring to keep the other one fully wound, so it loses no torque at all, until the second mainspring has run down completely. Thus, for half it's combined power reserve, it suffers no loss of torque and therefore accuracy. For the second half, it suffers torque loss as normal.
If you were able to put your hands on one of the 10 Vacheron Constantin Grande Complication Ultra-Plat, that would be my biggest joy. This watch has in my opinion no equal! Otherwise a review on some of the newcomers such as HYT would be great as they have a particular approach of watchmaking! (Let s not talk about the design of these, just the mechanism!) And ever heard of Code41? Quite a groundbreaking brand here in Geneva. Affordable watches for really good price. Would be nice to have your opinion too! Thanks for reading this and sharing your knowledge, and fingers crossed for the Vacheron Constantin!
Out of curiosity; wouldn't an automatic movement regularly worn negate the effects mentioned? So long as it's constantly in movement, it's also constantly filly wound, or am I missing something. These watches displayed are beautiful, but my budget is irreparably tied to the Seiko brand.
Lovely watch, excellent quality video as always. Thank you. Seriously considering the Black Bay 41, any chance of a review of this less famous Tudor? Cheers 👍🏻👍🏻
At 2:18 You can already see the wear and tear on one of the cheap gears that are used in this watch. For the price of this watch every gear in it should be made out of nothing less than titanium or D2 , hardened to a 61-62 Rockwell. Why don’t you people call out these cheap watch makers for the garbage they’re really making and not condone them for mediocre products that should be costing no more than $25
i guess this guy would be impressed by a watch full of complications but that does not tell time. "moon phases, power reserve, Tourbillon, springs, escapements etc etc" but with no hands that would tell time :D
Right, so based on what was stated in the video, that would suggest that an automatic watch would be more accurate than a manual wind watch, assuming the same quality of movement and assuming it's kept on your wrist, is this true?
The problem is he is completely wrong. That's not how balance wheels work. The amplitude goes down with lower spring tension but the frequency remains the same. That's the whole point of it. Watches would be pretty useless if this was not the case.
First: Congratulations and thanks for your great work through every single video ;) Second: I love the mechanical alarm watches, but I missed one specific video of those pieces from you. I would appreciate if you could compare and analise from: Vulcain, to the Memovox, passing through the Bellmatics, the Omega´s, Tudor, Bregett, etc.... :) Thanks!!
I had to keep rewinding to listen to the narration because the amazing looking movement kept distracting me. An absolutely stunning and captivating watch.
Is the hybrid spring set to kick in after a specific point of power reserve? Or is there something actually measuring torque that switches springs after a specific point? Also damn I love these videos.
I like your channel and watching your videos one after another and everything looks just great, except the same music over and over. I can’t listen it anymore.
We know you want more watches…. click here: linktr.ee/watchfinder
To my eye one of the best looking watches ever. Symmetric, sparse, transparent. It succeeds in looking both simple and complex simultaneously.
u've got just one eye left ?
@@igorcicala7 One eye per side of the watch
Agree! "Succeeds in looking both simple and complex at the same time" perfectly sums up this watch!
Igor Cicala ...Thus the perfect example of why the use and placement of comas are so necessary.
Really?
fun fact: i can't afford any watch in this channel reviewed.
fariz ascariz you think most people can? Heck even if I had the money I would not put that in a watch. If I was a multimillionaire, I might stretch myself to something like a GS if they make something that actually fits on my small wrist. I like watches for the mechanical aspect but I never wear one these days, I used to wear a 1000¥ Casio when I did wear one, found it on a discount at a watch store in Osaka some years ago. Black plastic case, black dial, black rubber band. Light, actually fits and doesn't get in the way.
@@noth606 me too aiming for GS or Seiko (Seiko MAYBE I can afford it).. Still doing survey for their price.. I'm wearing old 8 years old Orient Mako. I'm not sure why this RM350 when I bought it compare to watch in this channel crazy price. But I bought it at reputable shop. And looking it still alive until now, pretty sure it's original. 😂
@@noth606 you know that your money devalues every year while a good watch can hold or even increase in value? A watch is not a car, it is not stupid to pay for a luxurious watch
@@3xoticG4m3r so? I have more pressing things to spend money on than watches, I like them as objects but if I had an expensive one I'd never wear it because I might break it. I have a broken pretty nice Tissot that is broken because wear and life and so on. I could have it fixed but what for? I wouldn't wear it anyway, I don't wear watches anymore.
What makes that fun?
This video blew my socks off & I wasn’t even wearing any. Thanks for this.
🤣
Me, wow that’s a nice watch...
£17,500
Nope... nope I’m good.
Maybe I could afford 17,5 pounds for it... :D
Dammn
LoL... can't wear this
lasarith2 that's actually cheap for something like this, but I'd have much better uses for the money. Among them a GS snowflake which at least is wearable normally unlike this.
noth606 thanks
This channel is the definition of quality.
Another example of "we learn something new every day"
A&S have done a wonderful job here, artistry through design.
Thank you!
"Given that the lever escapement is over two-and-a-half centuries old, you would think that there’s nothing left to refine. "
What about the Zenith Oscillator? A review of the Zenith Inventor would be nice...
Also GP with their constant escapement which is an absolute engineering marvel.
This. I've been asking.
that's cause Zenith can't even get it to work properly. They had to change the beat rate ages ago because the movements would just completely shatter if dropped a few cm's, and they still haven't shipped to customers well over a year past due date
@@SWatchik Any source? Very fascinating
@@SWatchik They did ship. I checked out one of those last month in their dealer.
Always a consistent delivery of professionalism in his videos
The best content creator in the watchiverse without a doubt, and an Arnold and Son video! what a treat!
That watch is absolutely stunning, but the thought of being able to see my fat hairy wrist through it is not enticing.
There are plenty of people online, for example on Etsy, who can make you a cool custom strap with a bund pad. A bund pad is a piece of leather which goes underneath the watch, preventing direct contact between watch and skin. Initially used by the German Bundeswehr (hence the name) to protect the watch from sweat and the wrist from abrasion, there are also obvious aesthetic advantages. A watch like this would look epic on a bund pad made from some nice leather.
Busterkeatonrules 🤮
BMW M3 Shave your arms idk
@@Busterkeatonrules thats interesting, I never heard of a Bund pad before
Edit: I looked them up and I have definitely seen them before. But now I actually know what they are! lol
Arnold and Son is an under rated brand. Stands up to the macro lens as well. Great solution. Wouldn't a fusee and chain get around constant torque problem as well?
WOW! You guys really listened to our comments of more intricate and obscure watches. This is however, a true masterpiece of watchmaking, engineering, and ingenuity. Simply, amazingly beautiful. Great video like always.
I haven’t been feeling well these past two weeks and while resting I have come to watch quite a lot of your videos, which are excellent to say the least. I learnt about A&Son in your “5 Open Dials...” video (even though I’m not one for skeleton designs) and now have the A&Son pyramid tourbillon on my list of watches for my own dream collection. I would love to see more videos of this watchmaker.
been looking at this watch for years... absolutely stunning piece..
I had to watch it twice to understand it. But then I realized how simple the idea is. I love this! What a watch! What a channel.
Best part …. As you wind, seeing gears and hands move as a result. More of that in the future! Great video!! Thanks!
5:28 What's up with the top-left oxidation? For a watch of this price, was it hard to use some cheapo stainless steel for the components instead of carbon steel??
That and the gear that looks like is teeth are getting shewed up at 2:15
Stunning watch I'm still wearing a vintage baume I acquired it needs a service desperately I'm losing a minute a day the watch is 60/70 years old so I imagine the springs toast
i really love your videos and it makes every day you upload so much better :)
Hey, just want to say, i highly appreciate your reviews of that kind of quirky and complicated watches, technical details is interesting for me mostly. Design and emotional sence is more subjective. Much respect
That's a beautiful watch. Seeing the post of the mainspring move under the ruby is pretty cool
2:28 is the roman numeral wrong here? 4 should be IV and not IIII right?
northscylla It is quite usual to use IIII instead of IV in clocks and watches. Indeed there wasn’t a hard rule to write IV instead of IIII in Roman times, you can find a lot of examples around historical writings. IIII is prefered for symmetry in watches.
It's not wrong, but usually it would be IV. It's like comparing two different ways to write 4.
@@IDKline interesting read. Thanks!
The, drumroll, TIME PYRAMID no less... sounds more like an episode of Dr. Who.
“Doctor, the Daleks have surrounded us, we’re doomed!”
“To the TIME PYRAMID!”
🤣
you lost me after 10 seconds....but i love that watch.....truly beautiful
Amazing that they built something like this. Maybe not because of practicality, but in a pure sense to create an artwork you can read the time from.
Their watches are so underrated. I’ve seen 3 or 4 now and they are absolutely incredible. All in house movements too. ❤
What an unbelievably beautiful timepiece... this might be the first gold watch I genuinely deeply desire and find breathtakingly beautiful
No need to compromise, there's a stainless steel version too (full on with silvered gears) and boy oh boy is it pretty
What an amazing piece of tech!! Beautiful too. I would take this over a Richard Millle any day of the week.
Well when you set the bar that low... You might find me local diner saying "What an amazing piece of toast!! Beautiful too. I would take this over a Richard Millle any day of the week."
@@cubone44 Not too sure of your point, but each to their own, I guess.
There is a well known to engineers. spring power that delivers near constant torque over all of its wind from fully wound to the point when it stops, the "tensator spring". Tensator springs have been used in clocks and the Baygen wind up radio, but has never been used as fr as I know, in a watch. The tensator, made by a company of the same name is essentially a modern version of the fusee.
I spotted a rather rare Fred Perry Jaeger Le-Coultre Duoplan on Watchfinder, could you please do a review of it? I'd love to hear about the history of that piece. Looks phenomenal.
He don't have it..this dude reviews whatever topnotch watch any noble or aristocrat left behind or gave to auction after they died....so it's not cheap you see to be there reviewing those wierd watches
@@lorddiosliving It's available for purchase on their website, fredo.
You have peculiar taste.
@@UrSSuL I do indeed; I like rectangular, art-deco style watches. Cartier Tank, Cartier Americane, Franck Muller Long Island, Jaeger Le-Coultre Reverso, A. Lange & Söhne Cabaret, to name a few.
@@barfymann362 I'm in complete agreement with you, you have excellent taste !
My favourite period is that of (approximately) the 1930s - early/mid 50s and I have a passion for Art Deco, Duoplan JLC, Reverso, so-called "Bullseye" or two-tone watches and of course Sector Dial watches. From the differently-coloured inner spheres and outer encircling dial faces and "small seconds" found at the 6 O'Clock mark to the beautifully styled Arabic numerals and even appliqué indecises, the detail and craftsmanship found in such watches produced during an era of excesses in poverty and wealth - the Great Depression, the Second World War and postwar austerity or for others, from the Roaring Twenties to Swinging Sixties, conversely a time of unimaginable excesses indulgences, I am somewhat obsessed with the watches of this time period !
The watch looks breathtaking but I have no idea abt the brand
Reminds me of the Breguet watches
An old brand with quite a catalog of spectacular looking watches. These days it's owned by Citizen.
I was checking out their catalog and gosh they have so many beautiful watches
It's jus baffling tat likes of RM are more famous than these ultimate time pieces
Zeeshan Zia good eye! Breguet and Arnold were actually friends. No doubt had an influence on each other or shared a similar view on watches.
Oh wow never knew tat ...anyway thanks for the compliment 😌
‘I’d buy that for a dollar!’ Great watch, but I suspect out of my price range.
Pretty cool. Thanks for bringing it to our attention so we can admire and respect it, too.
I came for a clever trick,
I was not disappointed.
Lovely mechanic.
Beautiful piece. I just need to be sure to be wearing my glasses when I try to tell the time.
Always good to see another video from you guys
Very nice comparison to the car engine. It reminded me of one of your videos where you did an intro just like Doug DeMuro does, which leads me to believe you know your way around cars and that I really appreciate.
I have a suggestion for a future feature, perhaps a series or episode on Field Watches? I love my Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical, and to be able to see other alternatives above and below this range, and especially your teams input, would be a fantastic view!
What a beautiful watch and I have to say what a great channel. Please keep up the good work, every video is an education. Im trying to think on how many I have watched?
What if you combine a limiter like in the 8 day wind with a motor fueled by the movement of the arm (weight and air) to wind the springs, or even the secondary spring in this watch? My apologies if I misunderstood, but I am genuinely curious if it would work, and any corrections on my terminology.
Thank for yet another car reference. You explained it in terms that I can easily understand :)
It's beautiful. He came to my heart like no other
6:23 he said and blood your socks off, was that intentional? Im sure it was just to see who noticed it right
You should do a Video about the FP Journe Elegante. (I know it’s Quartz..but with a bonus!)
It’s funny this was my favorite watch 5 years ago so I looked it up out of nostalgia and you guys just dropped a video on it 💀
It's a good day when watchfinder releases a new video.
Before the fuseé, they had the stackfreed to supply regulated torque of the mainspring when it winds down.
I'm enjoying seeing new and exciting mechanical configurations. Q: Would it be possible to test exotic timepieces for time accuracy? Like measuring an "accuracy rating." With many watches now featuring two torbillions, I'd like to know if the technology pays off for accuracy. Or is it just for show. Thanks for a great series.
Speaking of movements, review the *Oris Big Crown ProPilot X Calibre 115* with 12-day power reserve.
When are you guys gonna film in 4K? It would be amazing
I may be wrong here, but doesn't Omega's co-axial movement have two barrels that accomplishes the same thing - even torque release?
Norseman Yes, there are even three-barrel watches (Not Omega, though)
Will I ever be able to listen to this voice just enjoying its bedtime story reading tone ?
So what I understand it is basically two engines, when one runs of fuel another starts the operation to keep the constant torque. Then it is not only Arnold & Sons only but I had seen other watches having having 2 barrels of main springs perform the same task just without 2 separate power reserve indicator. Am I correct?
Not exactly. Others use more than one mainspring to give a longer power reserve. Compared to one big mainspring, the drop in torque and therefore accuracy is less for smaller springs. This movement uses one main spring to keep the other one fully wound, so it loses no torque at all, until the second mainspring has run down completely. Thus, for half it's combined power reserve, it suffers no loss of torque and therefore accuracy. For the second half, it suffers torque loss as normal.
I shudder to think of the price. What a dream piece
What if you make it if the spring wounds down the escapemant is making les bpm so the distance is larger on the hands so u got the same accuartie.
If you were able to put your hands on one of the 10 Vacheron Constantin Grande Complication Ultra-Plat, that would be my biggest joy. This watch has in my opinion no equal!
Otherwise a review on some of the newcomers such as HYT would be great as they have a particular approach of watchmaking! (Let s not talk about the design of these, just the mechanism!)
And ever heard of Code41? Quite a groundbreaking brand here in Geneva. Affordable watches for really good price. Would be nice to have your opinion too!
Thanks for reading this and sharing your knowledge, and fingers crossed for the Vacheron Constantin!
Another epic quality video Andrew!
Just ordered a GS from watchfinder after all these videos
Ouch Wf are mega expensive
u mean G Shock ?
@@igorcicala7 No a Grand Seiko, they've done many Grans Seiko videos over the last year.
@@hammalamiri12 WISE CHOICE!
Snowflake? Spring drive?
This channel is going to make me spend money
Out of curiosity; wouldn't an automatic movement regularly worn negate the effects mentioned? So long as it's constantly in movement, it's also constantly filly wound, or am I missing something. These watches displayed are beautiful, but my budget is irreparably tied to the Seiko brand.
For something so symmetrical, the mismatch in direction of the screw head slots kinda irked me a bit.
I picked that up too!
Hi what is the model of the camera you feature in the background?
Please do Gshock Gsteel ...
That’s just perfect.
How about a review for Breguet type XXI 3817?
Curious, does amount of jewels have anything to do with power reserve? Or, is it strictly based on the size of the mainspring barrel?
Lovely watch, excellent quality video as always. Thank you.
Seriously considering the Black Bay 41, any chance of a review of this less famous Tudor? Cheers 👍🏻👍🏻
At 2:18 You can already see the wear and tear on one of the cheap gears that are used in this watch. For the price of this watch every gear in it should be made out of nothing less than titanium or D2 , hardened to a 61-62 Rockwell.
Why don’t you people call out these cheap watch makers for the garbage they’re really making and not condone them for mediocre products that should be costing no more than $25
Another simple way would be to out a tiny battery in it instead of the secondary spring. This battery would provide the power to wind the main spring.
To follow up, you could do a video on Grönefeld 1941 Remontoire
i guess this guy would be impressed by a watch full of complications but that does not tell time. "moon phases, power reserve, Tourbillon, springs, escapements etc etc" but with no hands that would tell time :D
Love it. Your videos are real gems. Especially these serious moments touched with something about blowing the socks off 🤪👍
That watch is incredibly beautiful and very impressive. It's kind of a bummer that you have literally zero chance of reading the time
Right, so based on what was stated in the video, that would suggest that an automatic watch would be more accurate than a manual wind watch, assuming the same quality of movement and assuming it's kept on your wrist, is this true?
The problem is he is completely wrong. That's not how balance wheels work. The amplitude goes down with lower spring tension but the frequency remains the same. That's the whole point of it. Watches would be pretty useless if this was not the case.
What a piece of art this watch is.
Sorry my ignorance, but didn´t Favre Leuba´s "Twin Power" do the same???
Yeah Arnold and Son make amazing watches.
First: Congratulations and thanks for your great work through every single video ;)
Second: I love the mechanical alarm watches, but I missed one specific video of those pieces from you. I would appreciate if you could compare and analise from: Vulcain, to the Memovox, passing through the Bellmatics, the Omega´s, Tudor, Bregett, etc.... :) Thanks!!
Drop everything! New Watchfinder video!
Can you please make a video on the Hublot mp-05 laferrari?
I had to keep rewinding to listen to the narration because the amazing looking movement kept distracting me. An absolutely stunning and captivating watch.
Great video as always! Can you do a review of Ressence watches?
What's the readability score?
What does that actually up to though in accuracy???
Beautiful watch. And a great video, as always.
Very informative, as usual thank you very much.
Pause it at 0:40 and lets appreciate a handsome watch....
But I cant. Because I ask myself... why am I not watching this in 4k resolution?
this is just beautiful!
Is the hybrid spring set to kick in after a specific point of power reserve? Or is there something actually measuring torque that switches springs after a specific point? Also damn I love these videos.
Wow. Then I saw the price on their website.....double-WOW.
I like your channel and watching your videos one after another and everything looks just great, except the same music over and over. I can’t listen it anymore.
INB4 automatic winding assembly.
Love the movement art in itself
It is a super enjoyable machine... of every ten times you look at the watch only one would be to know what time it is
love your videos!
Spring drive?
I'm speechless, what a marvelous timepiece.
Have you seen the Thunderdome?
Is that gear on the Right failing at 2:15? Looks like the teeth shewed up.
Watching your watchvideos is like mindfulness.
.
Ok, THAT is clever, as advertised. Whatever the proper name of that mechanism is, it is pretty smart.