Based on the explanation in the video it sounds like there are two separate power reserves. An automatic, which powers the regular watch and a separate manual wound power reserve that just powers the chronograph hand. Really cool actually. Never heard of a watch that does this before.
You have to manually wind the stopwatch, separately--and it has a short-duration power reserve. Like you have to manually wind the buzzer/bell on an alarm watch.
This achieves what the FP Journe centigraphe attempts to, but without any of the juddering of the chronograph hand and for a fraction of the price
Zenith is likely my favorite watch brand from top to bottom, especially when the back catalog is taken into consideration. Tons of cool references. ❤
My baby wrists tho :[
Zenith are so cool! ❤
I still can't comprehend how that hand can move so fast without depleting the power reserve. Horology is the closest thing to magic I can think of.
Based on the explanation in the video it sounds like there are two separate power reserves. An automatic, which powers the regular watch and a separate manual wound power reserve that just powers the chronograph hand. Really cool actually. Never heard of a watch that does this before.
Yep it has a separate power reserve for the chronograph and it can run that foudroyant for nearly an hour!
You have to manually wind the stopwatch, separately--and it has a short-duration power reserve. Like you have to manually wind the buzzer/bell on an alarm watch.
@@lajuntahighschoolI think some jump hour and jump minute/second watches use twin springs
Wrist check please, to see how it fits
First video I've ever seen wear tim didn't try it on lol must be huge haha