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Top Quality Tissot Stainless steel Watches (356) Items
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  • International Chronometry Contest - L.Leroy winner

    Tissot S.A. Swatch Group in Le Locle is the winner in the "Classic" category. Louis Moiet takes the third place.
    The winner in the school category is Mr Mathieu Douik. The announcement of the results took place on Thursday, October 24th, 2013 at the Musee de Temps in Besançon.
    The 38 competing exhibits filed by 17 companies (including 14 Swiss, two French and one German) and three watchmaking schools were submitted from May 30th to three sets of measurements carried out in the official certified laboratories of the Besançon Observatory and the Swiss Official Chronometer Testing Institute in Biel as well as undergoing particularly severe magnetic fields and shocks at the Haute Ecole Arc in Le Locle.
    The tests require that in order to qualify, watches must meet the international "chronometer" standard three times in succession with exposure to intense shocks and magnetic fields after the second series of tests and all this without any intermediate adjustment. This difficulty has not been reduced since the creation of this contest.
    There was excellent participation in the "Classic" category which saw 20 pieces competing. 12 of them passed all three tests to be in the running for the three places on the podium awarded to those with the best marks which are then announced. The winners were Tissot S.A. for the first 2 places (878 and 850 points out of 1000) and Louis Moinet S.A. (728 points).
    In "Tourbillon" (7 participants in all), Les Ateliers L. Leroy S.A.S. won the prize with 794 points, while most of the others did not stand up to the ordeal of shocks and magnetism.

  • Chronometrie - Greubel Forsey Victorious


    WORLDTEMPUS - 24 October 2011


    The tourbillon has once again reined supreme in the new International Timing Competition (Concours International de Chronometrie), which was held for the second time by the Museum of Horology in Le Locle, Switzerland. The first in more than 40 years was held two years ago. Greubel Forsey's Double Tourbillon 30° Technique, which is outfitted with a 60-second tourbillon cage inclined at 30 degrees rotating inside a second four-minute tourbillon cage, took both first place in the "Tourbillon" category with 915 of a possible 1,000 points as well as first place overall. Second place with 855 points went to the Chopard L.U.C. Tourbillon Twist All Black, and 791 points was enough to ensure third place for Technotime's tourbillon.


    In the "Classic" category (standard escapement), Tissot's Le Locle model won with 764 points followed by F.P. Journe's Chronometre Souveraine with 488 points. None of the four entries of the new "School Watch" category qualified for a place as they did not meet C.O.S.C. chronometer requirements for the duration of the competition. That isn't as bad as it might sound as there were many watches in the other two categories that also fell short of C.O.S.C. specifications - an indication of the difficulty in simply surviving the arduous competition, let alone being placed.
    The fully encased timepieces are first subjected to fifteen days of timing tests at the observatory in Besançon, France, then a fifteen-day C.O.S.C. test at the C.O.S.C. laboratory in Biel followed by exposure to a magnetic field and repeated shock before undergoing yet another fifteen-day C.O.S.C test. Each entered watch began with 1,000 points and lost one point for each second off a perfect rate.


    The domination of the tourbillons in the two competitions to date - Greuble Forsey's Double Tourbillon 30° Technique this year and Jaeger-LeCoutre's Master Tourbillon in 2009 - indicates that when well designed, well constructed and well regulated - none of which is an easy task - then the tourbillon escapement appears to offer real practical advantages to improved precision in the wristwatch. That was the premise Robert Greubel and Stephen Forsey set out to prove when they began development of their Double Tourbillon 30° more than ten years ago, and Thursday night's results were a well deserved vindication of their approach.
    This award completes a very well earned hat trick of major prizes for Greubel Forsey in recent years: the Gaïa Prize for Entrepreneurship in 2009; the Aiguille d'Or at the 2010 Grand Prix d'Horlogerie de Geneve; and now first place in the Concours International de Chronometrie 2011. Not bad at all for a small brand founded in 2004.

  • Chronometry - Second Concours Announces Participants


    WORLDTEMPUS - 8 July 2011


    When the winner of the first chronometry competition held since 1967 was announced, it was big news in the watch world. Testing one watch's accuracy over that of another had not been accomplished in more than 40 years, thanks in great part to the unquestionable hold that quartz has over mechanical systems.
    The watch world seems to be recovering nicely from the economic recession, and the desire for such a fundamental - and fun - technical competition begun in days of yore has once again emerged.


    While in the premier competition held in 2009, only 16 watches divided into two categories (companies and independent watchmakers) were submitted, the new edition of the competition boasts three separate classifications: traditional movements coming from companies, tourbillon movements coming from companies, and traditional movements submitted by watchmaking schools. In the latter category, there are four submissions from four very different students at four schools of watchmaking: two Swiss, one French, and one American. All four of these submissions are made on the basis of the ETA Unitas 6498 caliber. Here, apparently, the test is to see which student can best regulate this standard, stable workhorse to optimal chronometer specifications.
    The other 14 submissions come from ten companies: Kari Voutilainen, Chopard's LUC, MHVJ (a Vallee de Joux supplier), Mido, F.P. Journe, Technotime, Tissot, Frederique Constant, Greubel Forsey, and Leroy - all European companies based either in Switzerland or France.


    It is interesting to note that Jaeger-LeCoultre, the company that took both first and second place in the last competition - with two tourbillons, no less - is not participating in the 2011 edition. CEO Jerôme Lambert explained that since the company took both first and second places with tourbillons in the 2009 competition, the company wanted to enter a different movement. However, the desired movement - a new one - was not yet ready to launch, and thus the Le Sentier-based brand decided not to enter the competition this time around. "It is not that important for us anyway," Lambert remarked. "The competition's testing is very similar to the 1000 hour test that we subject every one of our watches to. Certainly, after the last competition, most of the other companies learned that in addition to accuracy, it is also important to consider stability."


    Measurements will be carried out in officially certified laboratories in Besançon, Biel and Le Locle. The watches will undergo magnetism and shocks tests reproducing conditions of everyday use. The Committee of Honour is chaired by astronaut and EPFL professor, Claude Nicollier. The jury comprising independent individuals and journalists in the luxury watch industry is chaired by Jean-Marc Triscone, dean of the Faculty of Science at the University of Geneva. Technical commissioner and a member of the jury is Laurent-Guy Bernier, delegate of the Swiss national metrology office METAS.
    The winners of the competition will be announced on October 20 at the Château des Monts watch museum in Le Locle.

  • Swatch Group - "Hour Passion" Venice


    Favorably located in the Schengen Area, in Venice's Marco Polo Airport, this sublime ring-shaped retail space of about 80 m² presents travelers with a range of successful watch brands including Longines, Rado, Tissot, Hamilton, cK Watch & Jewelry, Swatch and Flik Flak.


     
    The opening of this nineteenth multi-brand Hour Passion store boosts the visibility of the expert watch and jeweler airport retailer. Tech-Airport is already well-established in eight major European airports in France, Switzerland, Ireland and Germany, where it continues to consolidate its presence and keeps gaining visibility through its multi-brand or flagship boutiques operating under the Hour Passion, Swatch and Omega brand names.
     
    In the airport retail scene, Tech-Airport continues to assert its know-how and its concepts. It has been proactively developing non-stop since it was founded in 2004: in 2012, it will have a network of 40 sales outlets. 

  • Swatch Group - Tech-Airport Expansion in Berlin and Dublin


     
    The successful concessionaire will offer two "Hour Passion" watch and jewelry retail outlets, an Omega store, and one Swatch store island in the heart of the retail market.
     
    This notification reflects the across the Rhine airports confidence as it just follows the recent opening of its first German outlet in the Terminal C of Dusseldorf airport. It will bring Tech-Airport to a chain of 33 concessions.


     
    PIn the meantime, the leading watch and jewelry airport retailer is further expanding its network with the opening of an "Hour Passion" concept boutique in the new Terminal 2 at Dublin Airport.
     
    Tech-Airport, a company of The Swatch Group Ltd., in association with The Swatch Group Ireland Ltd., is opening its 30th store in an 86 m² area, whose modern technological, eco-friendly and functional design fits in perfectly with the innovative and contemporary terminal building. Taking advantage of the natural light flooding the boarding area, the boutique is almost open-fronted, inviting passengers to freely wander through the retail area to discover a full, appealing and accessible collection of many well-known watch brands: Swatch, Flik Flak, Certina, Calvin Klein Watches and Jewelry, Hamilton, Tissot, Rado, Longines... together with a selection of chic modern jewelry.
     
    A little further away, in the restaurant area, Flik Flak, the children's Swiss watch brand is the name behind the exclusive concept of a fantastic children's 50 m² play zone. Faithful to its spirit, the Flik Flak brand plays with time and makes it fun. Plenty of fun and games for young passengers in Dublin's Terminal 2!
     
    "Tech-Airport Holding SAS", a company of the Swatch Group Ltd. of Biel/Biene (Switzerland) was established in 2004 and specializes in airport retailing. It already has boutiques in seven European and Asian airports: Paris Roissy and Orly (France), Nice Côte d'Azur (France), Nantes Atlantique (France), Geneva (Switzerland), Changi (Singapore) and Dusseldorf (Germany). Its boutiques operating under the Hour Passion, Omega and Swatch brand names are now a reference point in European airports.
     
     

  • Greubel Forsey - New manufacture in La Chaux-de-Fonds


    The dedicated building, located a mere stone's throw from the Eplatures airport, is now home to the four companies created by Robert Greubel and Stephen Forsey, and jointly run by the two founders along with CEO Emmanuel Vuille: Greubel Forsey, CompliTime, CT Design and CT Time. Over one hundred people have now moved to the new premises from the Ancien Manege and other sites where the Greubel Forsey adventure began.
    Vividly reflecting the nature of Greubel Forsey watches, the new workshops are designed to be a concentrated blend of technological feats displaying a distinctive soul underlining the link between the past, present and future. It is composed of two buildings: a 17th century listed farmhouse renovated by Mr. Gilles Tissot (an expert in the renovation of Neuchâtelstyle historical buildings) which will serve as a reception area. It also houses the Unique Timepieces workshop, a showcase for the brand's creative excellence. The renovation work preserved numerous key features such as the shingle roof, external envelope and foundations. Various decorative aspects can be admired, such as a vaulted cellar, a former open fireplace, an 18th Century master room with its wood-worked ceiling and tiled stove, a carved doorway dating back to 1668, as well as the sundial symbolising the passage of time and perfectly suited to the building's new function.


    The main building directly linked to the farm and designed by architect Pierre Studer houses the development and production premises. Its original shape reflects a geological fold as seen in the topography of the Jura mountains, further enhanced by a 'green' or garden roof. It is also the first double-skin environment-friendly construction in the region and the glass outer walls create a natural thermal buffer zone. In summer, the air circulates to create a cool breeze; while in winter it is enclosed to serve as additional insulation. The ground-floor ventilation is equipped with an adiabatic cooling system (the extracted air is cooled by water evaporation and then used in a heat exchanger to cool the pulsed air). The ventilation system on the uppermost floor, home to the watch movement and final assembly department, is cooled by filtered air. Inside the building, concrete has been widely used to better stabilise temperature.
    Natural light streams into the whole interior from the outer walls and through the impressive glazed covered courtyard. The staircases on each side are a subtle reminder of the Ancien Manege.

  • Tissot - Couturier


    Just as the creations of the world's great fashion designers rely on the perfect mix of fabric and cut, the Tissot Couturier timepieces blend elegant lines with materials to match. This new 'collection' of 21 watches expresses modern elegance, tailor-made to today's diverse style statements. Sophisticated chronographs meet understated classics in one family, all closely related through their uncompromising attention to detail.

    Styled for individuals

    The Tissot Couturier watches express their made-to-measure character through a selection of five different movements. There are two Tissot Couturier Chrono Auto models, one powered by the celebrated 7750 Valjoux movement, the other by a newly developed ETA C01.211 mechanism. In these timepieces, the attention to detail is evident in small, finely marked, round chronograph counters, mirrored by a circular white date display. The Tissot Couturier Gent Auto turns heads with its symmetrical design, which is underlined by a two-part, arc-shaped date display at 12 o'clock and 6 o'clock. The Tissot Couturier Gent Quartz is a three-hand timepiece that seduces with its simplicity. Its counterpart is the Tissot Chrono Quartz with larger counters and a rectangular date window.

    Time for finesse

    All declinations of timeless elegance find their place in the Tissot Couturier family. For instance, there is a rose PVD interpretation and a sporty version with orange details for the automatic version. The wristlet comes in a choice of a metal finish or different coloured leathers, including a crocodile-look option. All attachments are smoothly integrated into the case to add an elegant signature. The eye for detail, which acts as the Tissot Couturier family's DNA, makes frequent appearances in the design, for example in a wave pattern on the lugs and faceted indices. In all of its outfits, the Tissot Couturier promises to outlive any fashion whim and stand the test of time.

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