939-piece micro-mechanical movement masterpiece…25 pieces @$280,000 per…
As part of the Geneva festivities last month, Le Locle-based Zenith
presented two new watches. I will get to the classy Captain Winsor
Annual Calendar (a boutique-only watch) at a later
date; right now we are going to take a closer look at the new Zenith
Academy Christophe Colomb Hurricane. As you can see, this is a somewhat
unusual looking piece — with its “bubble” and all the visible
components — with impressive mechanics underlying it all. I’ll break it
all down — with lots of high-res looks — below.
Zenith Academy Christophe Colomb Hurricane
Limited Edition 25 pieces
Price: $280,000 per
45mm x 14.35mm rose gold case (21.4mm thick with domed sapphire crystal)
By way of background, the first Zenith Academy Christophe Colomb was
introduced in July of 2010. The crowning achievement of the watch was
its display of the regulating mechanism, housed in a small bubble and
kept horizontal at all times through a micro-mechanical Cardan
suspension system (also known as a gimbal,
and commonly associated with gyroscopes and more specifically to
horoglogy, marine chronometers). Zenith was honored at the 2011 Geneva
Watchmaking Grand Prix in the Best Complicated Watch category for this
“Gravity Control” system. Originally, the $200,000+ watch was released
in a couple rose and white gold, and then later it was released in an extraordinary
platinum, skeleton, special-edition made exclusively for MARCUS London.
Now, Zenith has further evolved this intriguing timepiece, a la the
Christophe Colomb Hurricane, by adding a constant-force mechanism a la a
fusee-and-chain transmission system. The basic premise of a constant
force mechanism is to mitigate the progressive loss of isochronism of
the watch — the identical oscillations of the regulating organ as the
watch gradually discharges.
The Christophe Colomb Hurricane is undoubtedly a feat of
micro-mechanical engineering. Suffice it to say, translating a
chain-and-fusee mechanism into the diminutive space available inside a
wristwatch is a feat that few have accomplished. The case of the
Christophe Colomb Hurricane is 45mm — not excessively large by any
means. In total, the exceptional mechanism in this watch has an
astounding 939 parts — 585 components in the 18 cm-long chain and 354
for the movement of which 173 are for the gravity control module.
Fusée-chain constant-force transmission system
Throughout the duration of the power reserve, the barrel transmits its
force to the fusée via the chain that is wrapped around the barrel. By
adjusting variations in tension, the fusée transmits its constant force
to the going train that in turn imparts it to the silicon escape-wheel
inside the gyroscopic carriage. It takes over 50 hours – the entire
duration of power reserve – for the chain to wrap itself entirely around
the barrel.
Gravity Control System
Along with its fusée-chain transmission that eliminates variations in
isochronism, the Academy Christophe Colomb Hurricane also cancels out
another phenomenon exercising a detrimental effect on the rate of a
mechanical watch: gravity. Working on the principle that maintaining
the regulating organ in a horizontal position results in the best
possible balance amplitude and thus generates the best timekeeping
precision, Zenith conceived and patented a revolutionary Gravity Control
system designed to ensure that the regulating organ and the escapement
are permanently kept in this position.
Not only is the Christophe Colomb Hurricane a mechanical wonder, but
it is also a visual delight. The fusee-chain system, the horizontal
suspension carriage, the openworked hour and minute dial at 12 o’clock,
the hand guilloche small seconds and power reserve displays make for a
superb dial.
On the back, your eyes are first drawn to the globe-motif which has
been laser-engraved on to the counterweight of the gyroscopic module.
Other decorative elements such as Geneva strips (cotes-de-Geneve) and
perlage on the movement plates, circular graining, and anglage make
further enhance the look.
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