Selger / bytte en strøken IWC Worldtimer.
Kr 53.000
Klokken selges komplett med alle papirer, eske, garantikort, pusseklut PLUS ekstra reim som man kan se i bilder!
Kjøpt i Sverige gjenom Chrono 24 og kommer med faktura.
Bytte er av interesse i følgende merker:
Rolex Sannsnglivis penger din vei
Submariner Ref 1680 / 16800 / 168000;
Explorer II Svart skive;
Daytona 116520 / 16523
Vintage GMT)
Tudor Black Bay Black Ref 79220N (Smily / Rose) Penger min vei.
Jeg er kun interessert i disse merkene / ref.
This is a favourite watch in my collection, and the one I enjoy the most to use in business travels. But is time to let it go to move forward the collection. The watch was bought in Sweden through Chrono.24. The previous owner gave it to me in a IWC boutique.
The watch comes with its original case and card, and two straps. When it comes to Pilot watches, some may think - and rightfully so - on Brietling.
In my book, though, Pilots watches can only be IWC.
Now, about this particular IWC Pilot, the Worldtimer, or going nerd, the 326201: It is a limited edition launched only during 2012; a year IWC marked as “the year of the Pilot”. Its dial follows the classic, easy to read style on IWC pilots. But with the added World timer Complication.
For me have always been remarkable how easy to read is this dial, even though it carry lot of information. For a 45mm, it wears very confortable, in part because of the smooth case back, in part for the aligator leather strap, that is thicker where it join the lugs and become thiner and more flexible towards the clasp. The single deployment clasp is just super easy to wear on and off, and at the same time it is very very safe. Never once it went off when using the watch.
The brushed metal case (Remember the idea: instruments don’t reflect light in the eyes of pilots in the cockpit) is more subdue than the polished of many Brietling pilots watches.
Within the 45 mm case and behind the sapphire glass, the dial is were all the fun is, and where this IWC find its DNA. It has a very cool variation to other World Timer systems as those that Patek Philippe and Vacheron Constantin starting using in the 1930s. While the old Patekk system has a mobile reference city ring that can be aligned with an index, My IWC Worldtimer keep the ring with the (24) cities fixed. What rotates is its second white and black ring with 24 hours (white for day time, dark for night), making possible to actually read the time in all 24 timezones at once.
The inner dial and the outer ring with the cities is matte black, while the black part of the 24 hour ring is shiny black, therefore looking darker, giving depth to the watch, also because that 24 hour ring is a bit lower. The city ring is sloped, from the dial to the crystal, again lending some depth to the watch, and of course gaining a bit more space for the names and dots.
The date: A discreet small open window at three o’clock tells the date using a triple date display (current date marked by a small red triangle) to evoque the looks of an altimeter. Having a black background colour, it disappear on the dial until you want to see it. Setting of the functions: The adjustments are extremely practical and easy to set, and all work from the crown in just three positions.
The movement that keeps all this running is an IWC of the 3000 series based on the best ETA ébauches with modifications to IWC highest standards of cosmetic finish, (redesigning new main string barrel, new train wheels, new regulator),and adding on top of it, the IWC in-house module for the world time complication. Few other IWC Pilot has a more useful complication than this, (maybe a perpetual calendar?) Even more when you frequently travel internationally or work people in different time zones.
Honestly, this IWC watch may be easily one of the most affordable world timers on the market today, in this level of quality, by a top renewed brand with a notorious heritage and pedigree as IWC Schaffhausen.
Central hacking seconds * glass secured against displacement by drop in air pressure and has a soft-iron inner case for protection against magnetic fields The movement is an Calibre: 30750 * Frequency: 28,800 A/h / 4Hz * Jewels: 31 * Power reserve: 42 h * Winding: automatic * Materials: stainless-steel case, black dial, black alligator leather strap, folding clasp in stainless steel * Glass: sapphire, convex, antireflective coating on both sides * Water-resistant: 6 bar (50m or 160 feet). * Diameter: 45 mm * Case height: 13.5 mm
Kr 53.000
Klokken selges komplett med alle papirer, eske, garantikort, pusseklut PLUS ekstra reim som man kan se i bilder!
Kjøpt i Sverige gjenom Chrono 24 og kommer med faktura.
Bytte er av interesse i følgende merker:
Rolex Sannsnglivis penger din vei
Submariner Ref 1680 / 16800 / 168000;
Explorer II Svart skive;
Daytona 116520 / 16523
Vintage GMT)
Tudor Black Bay Black Ref 79220N (Smily / Rose) Penger min vei.
Jeg er kun interessert i disse merkene / ref.
This is a favourite watch in my collection, and the one I enjoy the most to use in business travels. But is time to let it go to move forward the collection. The watch was bought in Sweden through Chrono.24. The previous owner gave it to me in a IWC boutique.
The watch comes with its original case and card, and two straps. When it comes to Pilot watches, some may think - and rightfully so - on Brietling.
In my book, though, Pilots watches can only be IWC.
Now, about this particular IWC Pilot, the Worldtimer, or going nerd, the 326201: It is a limited edition launched only during 2012; a year IWC marked as “the year of the Pilot”. Its dial follows the classic, easy to read style on IWC pilots. But with the added World timer Complication.
For me have always been remarkable how easy to read is this dial, even though it carry lot of information. For a 45mm, it wears very confortable, in part because of the smooth case back, in part for the aligator leather strap, that is thicker where it join the lugs and become thiner and more flexible towards the clasp. The single deployment clasp is just super easy to wear on and off, and at the same time it is very very safe. Never once it went off when using the watch.
The brushed metal case (Remember the idea: instruments don’t reflect light in the eyes of pilots in the cockpit) is more subdue than the polished of many Brietling pilots watches.
Within the 45 mm case and behind the sapphire glass, the dial is were all the fun is, and where this IWC find its DNA. It has a very cool variation to other World Timer systems as those that Patek Philippe and Vacheron Constantin starting using in the 1930s. While the old Patekk system has a mobile reference city ring that can be aligned with an index, My IWC Worldtimer keep the ring with the (24) cities fixed. What rotates is its second white and black ring with 24 hours (white for day time, dark for night), making possible to actually read the time in all 24 timezones at once.
The inner dial and the outer ring with the cities is matte black, while the black part of the 24 hour ring is shiny black, therefore looking darker, giving depth to the watch, also because that 24 hour ring is a bit lower. The city ring is sloped, from the dial to the crystal, again lending some depth to the watch, and of course gaining a bit more space for the names and dots.
The date: A discreet small open window at three o’clock tells the date using a triple date display (current date marked by a small red triangle) to evoque the looks of an altimeter. Having a black background colour, it disappear on the dial until you want to see it. Setting of the functions: The adjustments are extremely practical and easy to set, and all work from the crown in just three positions.
The movement that keeps all this running is an IWC of the 3000 series based on the best ETA ébauches with modifications to IWC highest standards of cosmetic finish, (redesigning new main string barrel, new train wheels, new regulator),and adding on top of it, the IWC in-house module for the world time complication. Few other IWC Pilot has a more useful complication than this, (maybe a perpetual calendar?) Even more when you frequently travel internationally or work people in different time zones.
Honestly, this IWC watch may be easily one of the most affordable world timers on the market today, in this level of quality, by a top renewed brand with a notorious heritage and pedigree as IWC Schaffhausen.
Central hacking seconds * glass secured against displacement by drop in air pressure and has a soft-iron inner case for protection against magnetic fields The movement is an Calibre: 30750 * Frequency: 28,800 A/h / 4Hz * Jewels: 31 * Power reserve: 42 h * Winding: automatic * Materials: stainless-steel case, black dial, black alligator leather strap, folding clasp in stainless steel * Glass: sapphire, convex, antireflective coating on both sides * Water-resistant: 6 bar (50m or 160 feet). * Diameter: 45 mm * Case height: 13.5 mm