For the new Ingenieur Double Chronograph Titanium with the new IWC 
79420 calibre, IWC’s designers took their inspiration from materials 
typically used in Formula One: the casing ring is made of titanium and 
the striking screw heads in the bezel are made of ceramic. The crown, 
the crown protection and the push-buttons are lavishly coated with black
 rubber. The totalizers, which closely resemble tachometers, give the 
watch a consistent, instrument-inspired look.  Like most of the 2013 IWC
 collection, though this piece in particular, the design theme here is 
very well thought out from dial to case to strap.
IWC Ingenieur Double Chronograph Titanium 
(IW386501 silver dial, IW386503 black/blue dial)
Price: $12,700
45mm titanium case, rubber coated pushers
 and crown elements, automatic mechanical IWC 79420 split-seconds 
caliber (day, date, split seconds chronograph, small hacking seconds)

 Love those blue-triangle tipped subs!


Did You Know? 

RATTRAPANTE (“SPLIT-SECONDS”).  The word 
“rattrapante” describes the split-seconds mechanism on a chronograph, 
which catches up with the primary chronograph hand.Unlike a standard 
chronograph, the split-seconds chronograph has two hands that start 
simultaneously. The rattrappante or split-seconds hand, which is 
superimposed on the stopwatch hand, can be stopped independently using a
 third button at “10 o’clock”, while the stopwatch hand continues to 
run. This permits the user to record two separate times, exact to the 
second, within any given minute. If the third button is pushed again, 
the split-seconds hand instantaneously catches up and is synchronized 
with the other hand. The process can be repeated as often as desired.
 
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