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Top Quality Ulysse Nardin Silver Watches (68) Items
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Top Quality Ulysse Nardin Silver Watches (68) Items
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Replica Ulysse Nardin Silver Watches Latest Reviews

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  • GPHG 2015 - A celebration of the exclusive

    With a record number of different brands participating in this year's Grand Prix d'Horlogerie de Geneve (GPHG), the jury's decision was more difficult than ever. As always, there were some surprises mixed in with some more logical choices. Nobody could deny, for example, a moment of glory for Micke Pintus, Yannick Pintus and Jean-Luc Perrin as they collected the Jury's Special Prize for the world's most complicated watch ever, the Vacheron Constantin 57260, or indeed Jaquet Droz for its spectacular Charming Bird in the mechanical exception category ()

    Dig a little deeper, however, and the results are skewed in favour of watches costing in excess of 100,000 Swiss francs that few people will ever get to see, let alone wear. The winner of the men's watch category, the Voutilainen GMR, costs 108,000 Swiss francs, while the overall winner, the Greubel Forsey Tourbillon 24 Seconds Vision, costs 290,000 Swiss francs. The Antoine Preziuso Tourbillon of Tourbillons, which scooped both the Innovation Prize and the Public Prize, is even more expensive at a cool 480,000 Swiss francs (and completes a podium of tourbillons in the competition: since Greubel Forsey were in the tourbillon category, the second-placed watch, the Ulysse Nardin Anchor tourbillon, won the category).

    The very finest in watchmaking comes at a price, of course. But this year it seems to dominate all but four of the 12 categories. The exceptions are the sports watch (Tudor Pelagos), calendar watch (Hermes Slim perpetual calendar), chronograph (Piaget Altiplano chronograph) and the only category where price is an issue: the "Petite Aiguille", which crowns a watch whose retail price is under 8,000 Swiss francs.
    For the second time in three years, the jury picked as its winner in this category a watch that does not come from Switzerland, nor from Germany, nor even from Japan but from… Austria! If Habring2 was a combination of lottery numbers, it would be a very lucky one, since this little brand from Völkermarkt has not just been preselected four times but has also gone on to win its category three times in the past five editions of the GPHG, starting with the sports watch prize in 2012. At just 4,450 Swiss francs with a "manufacture" movement, its "Felix" model does indeed represent excellent value for money. But you might find it difficult to get your hands on one compared with, say, the Tudor North Flag that was preselected in the same category (and has a manufacture movement), since Habring expects to deliver just 50 of them this year.

  • Ulysse Nardin - Get Your Freak On


    Somehow it has become a tradition here at Worldtempus to "test drive" a spectacular watch during the Baselworld week. Two years ago, we kicked off with the Corum Ti-Bridge Tourbillon. Last year we had the pleasure of walking around all week with a De Bethune DB28 on our wrists. This year was no exception, and I almost shrieked with joy when Ulysse Nardin CEO Patrik Hoffmann strapped the Freak Diavolo to my wrist the day before the fair opened.


    A little history
    For those who may not know, the Freak was introduced in 2001 and has performed a grand service to not only Ulysse Nardin, but actually the watch industry at large. This spectacular watch was created and evolved by several of our industry's top minds, names that ring like sweet little bells when it comes to ideas and engineering: Dr. Ludwig Oechslin, Rolf Schnyder, Carole Forestier-Kasapi, Lucas Humair, Sandrine Benz and Pierre Gygax. Every one of them contributed something special to the project and all of them have treated this spectacular timepiece like a scientific, experimental laboratory - which is a good thing for the whole mechanical watch industry. Forestier-Kasapi (who was once head watchmaker at Ulysse Nardin) contributed the idea of the incredibly b mainspring that encircles the movement, which is wound by the back bezel; Schnyder and Gygax along with Benz brought in the new materials, primarily DRIE-etched silicon combined with LIGA materials and synthetic diamond; and Humair, as Ulysse Nardin's head movement designer, refined the movement structure.


    Dual Direct
    Though Oechslin's Dual Direct escapement is, in my opinion, the "heart" of the incredible Freak, the Freak Diavolo uses a Swiss lever escapement - though it is far from conventional since it was wholly created in the silicon process inherent to Ulysse Nardin's joint venture company Sigatec. Ulysse Nardin chose to use the Swiss lever escapement in this model because of a space issue; the Dual Direct takes up much more space, which could not be spared here thanks to the revolving flying tourbillon and the seconds display.
    One of the most intriguing elements about the Freak Diavolo is its ticking. Because of the volume of the case that is not entirely filled out with components (most of them are visible on the dial), the ticking is particularly loud and resonant. Unusually, this also creates the illusion of faster ticking, which fooled me into thinking at first that it was the Dual Direct keeping the time here.
     


    The Freak Diavolo is different from the other Freak models in that it allows a reading of seconds thanks to the addition of a flying tourbillon at the end of the minute hand, which carries a little second hand on the tourbillon cage with it. You can believe me when I tell you that this function is almost never used as the eye is directly entranced by the constant action on the dial - understandable since the entire movement except for the winding and the mainspring are visible on the dial and actually even function as the minute hand. However, if you want a to-the-second reading, it is there for you.


    Accuracy
    Because of the "thickness" of the minute and hour hands and tininess of the second indication, it is difficult to prove one way or another how accurate the Freak is, particularly if we are trying to see if it is chronometer-accurate. That can probably only be achieved with the use of a Witschi. For my purposes, I compared it every day to the time on my cell phone, and as far as that goes, it was completely accurate for the eight days I wore it. Through the course of the fair, however, reading the accuracy became increasingly difficult: it is a popular and fascinating watch, and almost everyone I came in contact with wanted to see it up close, which inevitably led to playing with the winding and setting functions done by turning the back and front bezels respectively. One clever little detail graces the Freak Diavolo that early incarnations of the Freak did not have: a latch to prevent the front bezel from accidentally turning. You must unhook the latch in order to be able to move the bezel. This is a grand addition to the Freak since the early editions had the problem of the hands moving accidentally.
    A word on the power reserve and winding functions: I was stunned by the ease with which this manual watch was wound. Boasting a full eight days of power (thanks to the gigantic mainspring that coils around the entire movement, visible through a peephole in the back), I would not have needed to wind the watch had I not been curious about this function. All you have to do is grip the back bezel and give it a twist. One full rotation of the back bezel is equal to 12 hours of power reserve, and thus you do not have to spend much time or energy on this. Really magnificent. The time-setting using the front bezel can be done either forward or backward, a house specialty.


    Wearing the unique Freak Diavolo felt like borrowing a piece of history. It made me proud to think of all the technology I was carrying around on my wrist, but other than having to look at the time, those were the only reasons I had to look at it. This wristwatch, which only comes in white gold, measures 44.5 mm x 13.6 mm - but I would never have known it as it hugged my little wrist so beautifully thanks to the short strap and the comfortable deployant clasp. Very unfortunately for me, while it is not limited, it is reserved for the very rich: it carries a price tag of $133,000. I will, however, continue to cherish my wearing experience.

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