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Montblanc Heritage Chronometrie Quantieme Silver Dial Automatic Men's Watch 112536

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US$462.00US$278.00 Instock In stock
Style Model: 112536
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Replica Montblanc Watches
About Our Replica Montblanc Watches

If you've ever wanted to Buy a Replica Montblanc watches, but couldn't afford it, our convenient Online store is right for you. Due to perfect quality and high cost performance, our Montblanc replica watches will be your wise choice. Welcome to visit our online shop! The top-notch Montblanc replica watches are suitable various occasions, not matter for the strict and official business conference or the pleasant family party.

Montblanc Heritage Chronometrie Quantieme Silver Dial Automatic Men's Watch 112536
Montblanc Heritage Chronometrie Quantieme Silver Dial Automatic Men's Watch 112536 1
  • WATCH INFORMATION
  • VIEW LARGE IMAGE
  • CARE & MAINTENANCE
  • CUSTOMER REVIEWS
  • RELATED PRODUCT

Watch Details

Stainless steel case with a black alligator leather strap. Fixed bezel. Silver dial with gold-tone hands and index hour markers. Minute markers around the outer rim. Dial Type: Analog. Pereptual calendar. Four - day of the week, month, date and moonphase sub-dial. Automatic movement. Scratch resistant sapphire crystal. Case diameter: 40 mm. Round case shape. Water resistant at 30 meters / 100 feet. Functions: hour, minute, second, perpetual calendar, moonphase. Additional Info: limited edition - 316 pieces. Luxury watch style. Watch label: Swiss Made. Montblanc Heritage Chronometrie Quantieme Silver Dial Automatic Men's Watch 112536.

Information

  • Brand:Montblanc
  • Series:Heritage
  • Model:112536
  • Gender:Men's
  • Watch Label:Swiss Made
  • Movement:Automatic

Case

  • Case Size:40 mm
  • Case Shape:Round
  • Bezel:Fixed

Dial

  • Dial Type:Analog
  • Dial Color:Silver
  • Crystal:Scratch Resistant Sapphire
  • Hands:Gold-Tone
  • Second Markers:Minute Markers around the outer rim
  • Dial Markers:Index
  • Sub Dials:Four - Day of the week, Month, Date and Moonphase Sub-dial

Band

  • Band Type:Strap
  • Band Material:Black Alligator Leather

Features

  • Water Resistance:30 meters / 100 feet
  • Calendar:Pereptual Calendar
  • Functions:Hour, Minute, Second, Perpetual Calendar, Moonphase
  • Features:Chronograph, Gold, Leather, Perpetual, Stainless Steel

Additional Info

  • Style:Luxury Watches
  • Item Code:
  • Internal ID:MB112536

Montblanc 112536 Features:

  • 1. Montblanc Watches provide the idea of high cost performance.
  • 2. Topnotch Men's Montblanc collection has really attractive looks that outstanding high quality.
  • 3. Own same technology as genuine watch.
  • 4. Fashionable style provides you great experience.
  • 5. The model number of the watch is 112536.
  • 6. The first-rate watch enables you to catch the fashion trend.
  • 7. This particular preeminent watch is equipped with a fine Automatic movement.
  • 8. Highlight your style and accentuate your taste!
  • 9. An ideal and exceptional appearance enables you to attract the attention of public.
  • 10. Black Alligator Leather bracelet makes your wrist really feel very comfy.
  • 11. Two important features: water-proof and dust-proof function.
  • 12. The watch is extremely readable along with Silver Silver dial.
  • 13. To be the focus of a party.
  • 14. Case Diameter: 40 mm.
  • 15. We strive to make you 100% satisfactory.

Payment & Shipping

We will arrange the delivery of Montblanc 112536 replica as soon as your payment is confirmed. Please make sure that your telephone number and email address are right, because the custome service representatives will contact you and identify your information, in order to deal with the shipments of your order. Generally, we deliver products through EMS, DHL, UPS, etc. And the tracking number will be sent to you via email once the watch is shipped. The shipping fee of any order is free. The package will be arrived about 7 to 15 days. We accept payment by PayPal, Visa/Master card, MoneyGram and Bank Transfer. If you pay by MoneyGram or Bank Transfer, we can offer you 15% off. If you have any questions about shipping and payment, please contact us freely, we'll be glad to help you!

Montblanc Heritage Chronometrie Quantieme Silver Dial Automatic Men's Watch 112536 Watch Image

Montblanc Heritage Chronometrie Quantieme Silver Dial Automatic Men's Watch 112536 1

Watch Care & Maintenance

The 7 Essentials for Fine Watch Maintenance
Respect Your Fine Timepiece and it Will Last You a Lifetime
A fine timepiece is a precision instrument. Literally hundreds of precisely engineered components must work together in perfect harmony to keep your watch running properly. With proper care, the fine watch you buy today will become a treasured heirloom that you can pass down to your children who in turn can pass it on to their children. If you ignore your watch, however, you’re asking for trouble.
How can you ensure that your fine timepiece will continue to run forever?
Follow these seven simple rules and you’ll have already extended your watch’s life:
1. Know if your watch movement is quartz or mechanical and act accordingly
2. Never over-wind your hand-wound mechanical watch
3. Remember that water resistant doesn’t mean waterproof
4. Don’t wear your watch while playing golf or tennis
5. Remember to wear your watch
6. Keep your watch clean
7. Choose your watch repair facility wisely. (View Details)

Products Reviews:

Montblanc Heritage 112536 Reviews
Gave this as a gift and they were very pleased with it. It has all the "bells and whistles" that men love.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Mexico City Mexico Df
Montblanc Heritage 112536 Reviews
small Montblanc watch as expected. Thanks
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United States Long Beach New York
Montblanc Heritage 112536 Reviews
this watch is breathe taking when i took it out of the box i was in shock at the beauty of the watch the picture don't do it no justice what a wonderful investment he will love this watch can't wait to give it to him for chirstmas
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United Kingdom Worsley.manchester
Montblanc Heritage 112536 Reviews
as advertized
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Egypt Alex
Montblanc Heritage 112536 Reviews
This Montblanc Heritage watch is so much prettier in person than in the photograph. It's stunning and even comfortable to wear which is unusual for a large watch. It's trendy , feminine and sparkly. I get plenty of compliments on it when I wear it.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Brazil S?o Paulo/sp

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Watches News

Montblanc - Timewriter II Chronographe Bi-Fequence 1.000

 The laws of physics are inviolable. The principle of conservation of energy decrees the impossibility of ever constructing a perpetuum mobile. And in order to measure time to the nearest 1/1,000th of a second, a mechanical watch must have a balance that completes 3.6 million semi-oscillations per hour, i.e. its frequency must be 500 hertz. But such laws, it seems, are binding only in the three-dimensional world. They're invalidated when we move into the fourth dimension: time. How else would it be possible for Montblanc to unveil at the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie in January 2012 a wristwatch chronograph that can measure elapsed intervals to the nearest 1/1,000th of a second, yet has a balance which oscillates at a pace of only 50 hertz? 


The Chronographic Paradox: Montblanc's TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000 
Montblanc's master watchmakers in Villeret have achieved a remarkable feat with the TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000. One is tempted to describe it as a triumph of mind over matter when this fifty-hertz chronograph is halted after measuring an elapsed interval and shows the span's duration with 1/1,000th-of-a-second precision at first glance. This watch was created in the context of the TimeWriter concept, which inspires the "Fondation Minerva" (that Montblanc founded in 2008) to create timepieces at two-year intervals which advance the great tradition of the authentic Swiss art of watchmaking towards its even greater future. 

Each timepiece constructed in the context of this project is a genuine innovation that embodies an entirely new idea but always transforms that concept into tangible reality through reliance on tradition. Furthermore, each such watch demands both broad-based horological expertise and the highest degree of craftsmanly skill. This was already most beautifully illustrated in 2010 by the Montblanc TimeWriter I Metamorphosis: a chronograph equipped with a filigree mechanism on the dial, activated by a lateral cursor that sets into motion a transformation of the dial from the function and characteristic of a sportily dynamic chronograph to the visage of a classically elegant watch and vice versa.
The TimeWriter project also endeavors to support talented and highly promising watchmakers. In accord with this philosophy, the TimeWriter II was realized by the Hispano- Swiss watchmaker Bartomeu Gomila at Montblanc's ateliers in Villeret under the aegis of master watchmaker Demetrio Cabiddu. Born on the Balearic island of Menorca, Bartomeu Gomila completed his training at WOSTEP in the category of "restoration and complicated timepieces" and is the first Spanish citizen to have earned a diploma from this renowned institution of higher learning. Recognized by the Swiss state, WOSTEP (Watchmakers of Switzerland Training and Educational Program) is an independent institution that's jointly supported by businesses in the Swiss watchmaking industry, international watchmakers' associations and watch dealerships around the world. As a continuing-education institution, its prospective students must prove that they have completed their training as watchmakers and have gained several years of professional experience in their metier. The widely diverse courses taught at WOSTEP include an introduction to the Swiss lever escapement, precision time measurement, and the functions of watches with "grandes complications". A certificate from WOSTEP is recognized worldwide as one of the highest educational qualifications for watchmakers. After completing his course of studies, Gomilla restored historical timepieces from renowned brands and most recently worked as a freelance restorer of historical timepieces for international collectors. Readers who would like to learn more about Bartomeu Gomila are welcome to visit his website at www.tallerdeltemps.es.
A Pioneer in the Measurement of Extremely Brief Intervals
Founded in 1858, the Minerva manufacture was completely integrated into Montblanc as the brand's haute horlogerie manufacture in 2008. For more than a century, Minerva has ranked among the most famous, limited suppliers of high-quality instruments for measuring brief intervals of time with an outstanding precision. This is true both for watches which combine a display of the ordinary time and a stopwatch function (now generally termed "chronographs"), as well as for classical stopwatches, which serve only to measure brief elapsed intervals. Minerva was among the first to debut a mechanical stopwatch with 1/100th-of-a-second accuracy. This stopwatch, which appeared around 1916 and was redeveloped in 1936, has a large chronograph-hand that completes one full circle every second. Nearly a century later, this timepiece would serve as an inspiration when Montblanc's watchmakers began the project of realizing the Montblanc TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000.
A first glance this superlative Montblanc chronograph raises the question: "Where are the chronograph's buttons?" As an authentic monopusher, this watch has only one button. In homage to the ultrafast stopwatches presented by Minerva in 1936, which were included in the Guinness Book of Records, this lone button is positioned at "12 o'clock" and exactly midway between the horns, where none but chronographic initiates are likely to see it and comprehend its purpose. Beneath this button stretches a dial that promises complicated mechanical timekeeping in its purest form. This multilayered sculpture presents various functions on different levels. This description may sound complex, but the practical result is good and provides unmistakable legibility.


The 1/1,000th of a Second at a Glance
The ordinary time of day or night is indicated by an hour-hand and a minute-hand at the center of the dial; a rotating disc of sapphire crystal collaborates with an immobile triangular index to track the continually running seconds at "9 o'clock": both of these displays keep time accurately thanks to a large screw balance which swings at the traditional pace of 18,000 hourly semi-oscillations (2.5 Hz) and is readily visible through the partially skeletonized dial at "7 o'clock." All other indicators serve the chronograph function, to which this exclusive timepiece devotes the highest priority. The chronograph's little balance can be seen at "half past ten": when this speed demon is switched on, it oscillates at a rate of 360,000 A/h (50 Hz). These vibrations are so fast that they can no longer be seen by an unaided eye: only a quiet purr can be heard, not unlike the sound of a well-lubricated Singer sewing machine. The chronograph's indicators begin with a red, centrally axial, elapsed-seconds hand: it completes one full 360° rotation every second so that its tip sprints along the hundredths-of-a-second scale on the dial's periphery. A double counter at "6 o'clock" has a longer, red-tipped hand tip to tally elapsed seconds from one to sixty, as well as shorter, all-red hand to count a maximum of fifteen elapsed minutes. A slightly inset cartouche at "3 o'clock" indicates the remaining reserve of power for the chronograph's movement which, when fully wound, will suffice for more than forty-five minutes. The powerreserve display also serves as a helpful indicator for the chronograph because it shows how much longer the chronograph will continue to run beyond the fifteen elapsed minutes it can tally. But the unchallenged piece de resistance tops the dial at "12 o'clock," where another cartouche boasts a little triangular arrowhead that runs along an arcing scale calibrated from N (for "neutral") through zero, and thence to nine-thousandths of a second.


How It Works
When an elapsing interval is being measured, the chronograph's elapsed-seconds hand (the trotteuse) orbits the entire dial once per second. But rather than occurring as a smooth progression, this circular motion is subdivided into 100 individual steps which the naked eye cannot distinguish from one another, just as the twenty-five motionless photos that succeed each other in each second of a classical film are perceived as a seamlessly flowing motion picture. The chronograph's center-wheel, to which the central chronograph hand is affixed, likewise jumps from one tiny step to the next in hundredth-of-a-second increments. 

Thousandths of a second are measured in an entirely different way. The Spanish watchmaker Bartomeu Gomila was inspired by a childhood memory: as a boy on the island of Menorca, Bartomeu loved to play with a big wooden hoop, which he would roll along the beach either by repeatedly pushing it with his hand or striking it with a little stick. He soon realized that he could keep the hoop rolling in a uniform rotary motion if he continually gave it equally b impulses at equally timed intervals. Decades later, this phenomenon would point him on the path toward an ingenious method for measuring thousandths of a second. For nearly a century, the watchmakers at the Montblanc manufacture in Villeret had already known how to make a mechanical watch that could measure hundredths of a second. The secret was a balance with a frequency of 50 hertz (360,000 A/h). This rapid oscillator completes 100 to-and-from motions per second, i.e. 50 times in one direction and 50 times in the other. This tempo not only guides the motion of the trotteuse in the Montblanc TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000, it also sets the pace for delivering an impulse of energy that sets into rotation an innovative wheel in the gear-train, the so-called "thousandths wheel" (mobile de millieme). Powered in this fashion, it rotates around its own axis at a uniform speed of ten rotations per second and thus provides the resolution with which hundredths of a second can be further subdivided into sets of ten increments. The chronograph function is controlled by a two-level column-wheel: one level guides the start, stop and zero-return functions; the other level controls the thousandths wheel.

This solution offers enormous advantages which make it far superior to every conventional mechanism that has ever been used to measure thousandths of seconds with the aid of a 500- hertz oscillating body.
1. A frequency of just 50 hertz generates considerably less friction and drastically reduces wear.
2. The Montblanc TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000 amasses a power reserve for measuring brief intervals that is several times larger: it suffices for 45 minutes, but it can be continually lengthened by periodic manual winding.
3. The long-lasting power reserve also contributes to the regularity of the amplitude of the hundredths-of-a-second balance which, in turn, enhances the precision of the time measuring - a decisive advantage for accurately measuring intervals to the nearest thousandth of a second.
4. Reading the elapsed time is very simple because it follows the familiar pattern used on ordinary chronographs. The thousandths of a second are displayed on a cartouche at "12 o'clock," where a triangular red pointer progresses along a scale calibrated from 0 to 9. The resting position is indicated by the lettered "N" (for neutral), leaving the 0 to unambiguously indicate zero thousandths, i.e. one full one-hundredth of a second.
A comprehensive package consisting of two main patents and twenty-two auxiliary patents protects the principle and the technology for this timekeeper, which is designed to measure brief intervals with resolution to the nearest thousandth of a second.


Let the Measuring Begin!
The mainspring for the ordinary timekeeping movement is wound by turning the crown clockwise (the power reserve is about 100 hours). Turning the crown counterclockwise tenses the separate mainspring for the chronograph's movement, which delivers optimal measuring results for more than forty-five consecutive minutes. To tally lengthier intervals, power can be conveyed to the chronograph's barrel by turning the crown while the chronograph is running. Pressing the button between the horns at "12 o'clock" starts the chronograph: the long red trotteuse begins to race once per second around the main dial, twin counters at "6 o'clock" tally its rotations, the little red hand on the chronograph's power-reserve display gradually progresses upwards, and the 1,000th-of-a-second arrowhead at "12 o'clock" points motionlessly toward the "N". When the chronograph button is pressed again, the entire system instantly halts and the duration of the elapsed interval can be read: beginning with the number of elapsed minutes on the inner scale on the twin counter at "6 o'clock," followed by the elapsed seconds on the outer scale of the same subdial, continuing with the hundredths of a second on the peripheral scale surrounding the main dial, and culminating with the thousandths of a second in the cartouche at "12 o'clock." The entire process is simple, clear, quick and requires no additional calculations.
This ingenious principle for measuring extremely brief intervals of time has been registered for patent protection.


The Beauty of Technology in 18-Carat White Gold
To assure that full attention can be concentrated on the technical refinements of this extraordinary measurer of brief intervals, the external design of the Montblanc TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000 exclusively highlights the complexity and beauty of its indwelling caliber. No dial obstructs the view of the complicated movement, which rewards a connoisseur's scrutiny by revealing two balances and numerous hand-polished levers. The curvature of its 47-mm-diameter, 18-carat white gold case flows elegantly into the horns. Montblanc's star-shaped logo is crafted as a mother-of-pearl inlay atop the readily grasped and slightly onion-shaped crown at "3 o'clock." The chronograph button, positioned midway between the horns at "12 o'clock," has a harmonious design that fits perfectly into the overall styling, as well as a light and readily palpable pressure point to facilitate extremely exact measurements of very short intervals. The wristwatch is affixed to a black alligator-skin band with a pronged buckle made of white gold. A double row of red stitches adds an attractively sporty accent to the strap. The nearly quadratic reptilian scales prove that leather from the costliest part of the animal's skin has been used.
Needless to say, the case has a screwed back with a pane of sapphire crystal, through which the watch's owner can gaze to admire the exclusive mechanisms of this superlative chronograph and the elaborate, manually executed finishing on its individual components. The Montblanc TimeWriter II Chronographe Bi-Frequence 1,000 will be manufactured in a limited edition of thirty-six watches, so it will forever remain a rare pleasure. Thirty-six was chosen for the number of watches as an homage to the year 1936, when Minerva built the ultra-fast stopwatch that earned a mention in the Guinness Book of Records.


Technical details