IWC at SIHH 2015: please welcome the new Portugieser

IWC at SIHH 2015: please welcome the new Portugieser.

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It is not by chance that we have not given during the fair a preview of any of the novelties introduced by IWC at the SIHH 2015, but just released a picture of some of them on our Instagram profile. Behind the celebrations for the anniversary of an emblematic collection from IWC, the Portugieser (as Italians we will continue to call it “il Portoghese”, but please don’t call it “Portuguese” in English anymore), lays an impressive product development roadmap that goes well beyond the current year, and it revolves around present and future mechanical manufactured movements. To have given even a simple preview would have been reductive to say the least.

The Portugieser’s 75th anniversary is all about design, new products but, above all, a decisive acceleration towards the brand consolidating its position among well-established high-end watchmaking industries: concept, development and in-house production of every single component.

This message, quite clearly expressed during the press conference, has three main take-outs: the continuous improvement of the current range of complicated calibers, the upgrade of the Portugieser’s collection, a great deal of work on details. The most visible outcome is the launch of two new models, as well as six products updates; this raises the technical bar and improves brand awareness even further.

The future is represented by the launch of two new calibers, the IWC 69000 and the IWC 42000, a chrono and a three hands base movements: this will also mean that some entry-level models will adopt very refined in-house movements (expect the 42000 to go on the 40mm Ingenieur and the Aquatimer, the 69000 to power the Aquatimer and Pilot’s chronos, maybe). We will discuss this in a separate article.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Annual Calendar 5035 treThe flagship of the 2015 collection is the Portugieser Annual Calendar ref 5035. Eagerly awaited, teased and previewed, it fills in the gap between the Portugieser Automatic and the Perpetual Calendar, and is a complicated as neat as the Portugieser Automatic (it features a 44,2mm wide and 15,3mm thick case), with the addition of three tiny windows for month, date and day of the week, placed along a circular sector at 12.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Annual Calendar 5035 dueIWC has developed a new caliber belonging to its 52000 caliber platform, the 52850; this activates, merely via the crown (as always, no corrector is placed on the case), all months, except for February and leap years; for that we have the perpetual calendar.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Annual Calendar 5035Indeed, the entire 52000 series has been further improved by adopting, for instance, ceramics for reducing mechanical friction (the rotor’s ball bearings), a new rotor design, an increased balance wheel operating frequency. In a nutshell: 4Hz calibers boasting a 7 days Power Reserve, increased efficiency and an enhanced visibility of the movement, whose size is comparable to the case’s width.

SIHH 2015 IWC movement comparisonIWC automatic timepieces have indeed a close to one movement size to case size ratio, thus making the Annual Calendar a complicated wristwatch that blends the pros of a high-efficiency automatic watch (I’m talking about the updated Pellaton winding system) with an almost “skeletonizedthree-spoke bidirectional rotor, so that it almost feels like holding in your hands a complicated with a manual wind, Pocket Watch like caliber, for the pleasure of true connoisseurs. So far no other brand in today’s haute horology has conveyed this message as successfully as IWC.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Annual Calendar 5035 puzzle signedI asked myself why IWC added the writing “Annual Calendar” on the dial. Was it necessary? Probably not, but I think the answer is to be found in the word “symmetry”, which is taken quite seriously at Schaffausen (I already discussed this in a previous post, with reference to the Top Gun’s Perpetual Calendar’s four counters symmetry): try to ideally remove the writing from the dial, and it will seem that the circular sector has been moved towards the inner rehaut, thus increasing the visual gap between the window itself and the two counters plus the “IWC Schaffausen” wording. What is hard to show you with photos is the “glass box” sapphire crystal: on the wrist, the Annual Calendar is “perfectly balanced” and if it weren’t for the price point (21.500€ for the stainless steel model, 31.700€ for the red gold, approximatively) it could easily overlap the Portugieser Automatic.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Automatic 5007The Portugieser Automatic itself has undergone a technical renovation, receiving the updated caliber from the 52000 family (52010), featuring a Côtes de Genève and a perlage finish (and two barrels). The Portugieser has always been associated with the Perpetual Calendar, and IWC has the greatest collection of complicated watches with a perpetual calendar “base architecture”, whether you’re a professional diver, a sailor or a pilot.

SIHH 2015 IWC Perpetual Calendar Digital Date and Month Edition 75 Anniversary 3972The IWC 89801 caliber thus equips the 45mm platinum (25 pieces) or red gold (75 pieces) Perpetual Calendar Digital Date Month Edition “75th Anniversary”’s case. The Perpetual Calendar complication thus comes with a month, date and leap year (placed at 6) digital visualization and a flyback chrono function. It is a fascinating complication, such as it appears on the Aquatimer, a Pilot’s Watch or an Ingenieur, but I believe it to be a bit out of context on a Portugieser, as it has a high-tech take look that does not really comply with a Portugieser’s style. It will retail at 45.700€ (approximatively).

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Perpetual Calendar 5034 dueThe classic Portugieser Perpetual Calendar, invented by master watchmaker Kurt Klaus (he was at the Fair) has been updated too. The reference 5034, featuring the double moon, for both Northern and Southern hemispheres, has replaced the next full moon countdown indicator with stars-embellished dial (as it appears on the Pilot’s Perpetual Calendar Edition Le Petit Prince, if I’m not mistaken). It comes in white gold at 40.900€ (approximatively) and at 38.900€ (approximatively) in red gold.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Perpetual Calendar 5034The reference 5033 has been aesthetically updated and now adopts a highly curved sapphire crystal. It will retail for 39.900€ in white gold and 37.900€ in red gold (approximatively). I honestly can’t fathom why this model is also on offer with a double moon version, but I will attempt to find an answer to this when these three timepieces will individually feature in the Perpetually Yours column.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Perpetual Calendar Grande Complication 3776 unoGoing up the complications’ scale, the Grande Complication sits at the top. The most relevant esthetical update is the removal of the globe from the dial, and the return to the purity of the first Grande Complication. The perpetual calendar comes with a chrono and a minute repeater for hours, quarters and minutes. The 45mm case houses 659 parts that activate 20 different functions.

SIHH 2015 IWC Portugieser Perpetual Calendar Grande Complication 3776It’s a pity one can’t admire the movement, as the case back is closed and has, instead, a wind star engraved on it. The strap is supplied by IWC’s Italian partner Santoni and has either a red gold or platinum stitching, depending on the version. It will be produced in just 250 pieces in platinum, and 250 in red gold and it will retail at 227.000€ and 197.000€ (approximatively) respectively.

(Photo credit: IWC; Horbiter®)

Gaetano C. @Horbiter®

@Gaetano Cimmino

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