Tag Archives: Watch

Breil Abarth 1000: A Scorpion’s Legacy, Told in Carbon and Steel

There’s a certain magic in Italian collaboration — the kind that turns metal into emotion and speed into art. From the throaty rasp of an Abarth exhaust to the mechanical heartbeat of a finely tuned chronograph, Italy has a knack for making machinery feel alive. The latest proof of this symbiosis comes from Stellantis Heritage, celebrating a decade-long partnership between two icons: Abarth and Breil.

The result? The Breil Abarth 1000, a limited-edition chronograph that doesn’t just tell time — it tells history.

A Watch Born from Records

The Breil Abarth 1000 celebrates a defining moment in the Scorpion’s legacy: October 20, 1965, when Carlo Abarth — then 57 years old — climbed into a one-liter, open-wheel single-seater at Monza and set his 100th world record.

This was no symbolic victory lap. The man himself underwent a crash diet, shedding nearly 30 kilograms — reportedly on a diet of nothing but apples — just to squeeze into the cockpit of the Abarth 1000 single-seater, a featherweight 500 kg machine powered by a screaming 982-cc four-cylinder good for 105 hp at 8,800 rpm.

The reward: world records for acceleration over a quarter-mile (13.62 seconds) and 500 meters (15.38 seconds) in FIA’s G Class. Not satisfied, Abarth returned the next day with a 2.0-liter engine fitted to the same chassis and took two more records in the E Class.

The car itself remains a mechanical sculpture of mid-century Italian ingenuity — you can still admire it today in Turin’s Heritage HUB, resting alongside the record-breaking 750 Bertone and Fiat-Abarth 1000 Pininfarina.

From Track to Wrist

Fast-forward sixty years. The Breil Abarth 1000 Chronograph translates that audacious spirit into wristwear form — equal parts tribute and tool. Only 465 pieces will ever exist, each numbered and engraved with “1965–2025 ABARTH 1000 – 60 Years of History.”

Like Abarth’s racing cars, the Breil Abarth 1000 is a study in purposeful design. Its 42 mm black IP steel case is aggressive but not ostentatious, the forged carbon bezel a direct nod to the composite materials found in modern supercars. A carbon-fibre dial anchors the design, complete with applied indices and three chronograph sub-dials that echo the gauges of a single-seater cockpit.

The START and STOP pushers, each shaped and finished to evoke race car controls, are tactile reminders of the Scorpion’s DNA. The red highlight on the start pusher, set against the matte black background, screams Abarth — equal parts aggression and precision.

Under the sapphire crystal beats a TMI VK63 quartz movement, a hybrid-mechanical caliber known for crisp chronograph action and impeccable reliability. Water resistance is rated to 10 atmospheres, ensuring it’s as durable as it is stylish. The black IP steel bracelet with a deployant clasp completes the package — a subtle blend of muscle and refinement.

Mechanical Soul, Modern Precision

There’s poetry in how the watch mirrors the car. Both share compact dimensions, obsessive engineering, and a disregard for compromise. The forged carbon bezel mirrors the aluminum skin of the original single-seater — light, purposeful, unpretentious. The red accents mimic the pulse of Abarth’s performance aesthetic.

Even the production number — 465 — feels deliberate, matching the spirit of exclusivity Abarth fans know all too well.

At €399, the Breil Abarth 1000 isn’t about Swiss haute horlogerie or investment value. It’s about passion. It’s about strapping a slice of Monza’s history to your wrist and feeling that same thrill Carlo Abarth felt as he thundered past the timing line — one eye on the tachometer, the other on immortality.

The Breil Abarth 1000 isn’t just a timepiece. It’s a reminder that true speed never ages — it just changes form.

Source: Stellantis

Time, Engineered by AMG – When Precision Meets Performance

There are watches that tell time — and there are watches that perform. Mercedes-AMG, the in-house sorcery division of Mercedes-Benz, is no stranger to performance. The Affalterbach engineers have long turned raw horsepower into symphonies of precision and speed. Now, they’ve turned their attention to something smaller, quieter — and just as intoxicating: timepieces.

The new Mercedes-AMG watch collection isn’t a half-hearted licensing deal. It’s AMG’s philosophy distilled into steel, titanium, and Swiss mechanics. Three models, all Swiss Made, all unapologetically AMG — a mechanical reflection of the brand’s mantra: One Man. One Engine. One Watch?

The AMG Business Automatic Chronograph – Elegance with a Pulse

Imagine the spirit of an AMG GT 63 S compressed into 43.5 millimetres of wrist presence. The AMG Business Automatic Chronograph is exactly that — a blend of precision engineering and aesthetic aggression.

At its heart beats the Sellita SW500 automatic calibre — a movement known for its dependability and performance, running at a silky 28,800 vibrations per hour. Peer through the sapphire crystal case back, and you’ll find Côtes de Genève finishing, a perlage pattern, and a black-coated rotor wearing the AMG logo like a badge of honour.

The case itself — a hybrid of black PVD-coated stainless steel and titanium — cuts weight like a forged AMG wheel. On the wrist, it feels light but substantial, confident yet unpretentious. Subtle red accents lick the subdials, like brake callipers peeking through carbon-ceramic discs. And while the stopwatch function feels track-ready, the overall design is tailored enough for a boardroom. It’s business class, AMG-style.

AMG Watch Essentials – Minimalism, Engineered

This is the C-Class Coupe of watches — the purest expression of AMG DNA. Powered by a Swiss Ronda 6004 quartz movement, it values precision over pomp.

The case design echoes the futuristic sweep of the Vision AMG concept — a multipiece sculpture of titanium and black stainless steel that feels both industrial and luxurious. The ceramic bezel gleams in polished black, traced by a whisper of red that hints at the power beneath.

The 3D dial hosts numerals made of Globolight XP©, a luminous ceramic that charges with light and glows in the dark like taillights on a moonlit autobahn. On the wrist, it’s restrained aggression — compact at 40mm, featherlight, and effortless.

AMG Watch Essentials Chronograph – The Track Weapon

For those who prefer their seconds measured like lap times, the Essentials Chronograph brings the stopwatch precision of AMG’s pit-lane philosophy. Beneath its sapphire glass lies a Ronda 5030 quartz chronograph — Swiss reliability with the no-nonsense character of an AMG straight-six.

Titanium and stainless steel form a chassis worthy of the AMG GT R, while the matt black ceramic bezel wears a white tachymetre scale like a racing stripe. Superluminova® indices and luminous numerals guarantee clarity at 300 km/h — or 3 a.m.

Even the strap system gets the AMG treatment: the folding clasp is engineered so precisely it conceals the connection on the inside, giving the watch a seamless, aerodynamic silhouette.

All three timepieces are Swiss Made. All three channel the same obsessive pursuit of performance that defines AMG’s engines. There’s no unnecessary ornamentation, no gimmickry — just craftsmanship, functionality, and the kind of attention to detail you expect from people who build cars that can lap the Nürburgring before breakfast.

You won’t find these in jewellery boutiques or duty-free shops — only at Mercedes-Benz dealerships, where torque, timing, and taste converge.

Mercedes-AMG Watches: proof that performance doesn’t always roar. Sometimes, it ticks.

Source: Mercedes-Benz

Bugatti Tourbillon Baguette: A Watch Engineered Like a Hypercar

Bugatti has never been content with simply building the fastest car in the world. From the Veyron to the Chiron, the French marque has consistently rewritten the rulebook of what a hypercar can be. But with the new Bugatti Tourbillon, the brand has elevated its ambitions beyond speed, merging the worlds of haute horology and automotive engineering into one breathtaking statement of craftsmanship, innovation, and artistry.

Bugatti Tourbillon Baguette: A Watch Engineered Like a Hypercar

The Hypercar, Redefined

The Tourbillon hypercar is the beginning of Bugatti’s next chapter, one that blends sculptural design with staggering mechanical precision. Its very name pays homage to watchmaking’s most revered complication, signaling the synergy that defines this new era. Just as a tourbillon mechanism regulates time with unrivaled accuracy, Bugatti’s machine seeks to regulate the hypercar landscape with unparalleled control, power, and beauty.

The car itself represents the pinnacle of Bugatti’s engineering—an intricate machine where performance and design move in lockstep. Yet the story of the Tourbillon isn’t confined to asphalt. It extends to the wrist.

Time, Engineered

Enter Jacob & Co., Bugatti’s equally audacious partner in the world of fine watchmaking. Together, they’ve crafted the Bugatti Tourbillon timepiece, a horological masterpiece that mirrors the ethos of the car it was named after. More than a simple tribute, it’s a direct continuation of Bugatti’s vision: fusing artistry with mechanics in ways previously unimaginable.

The watch’s dial layout takes cues straight from the Tourbillon’s dashboard. A 30-second flying tourbillon dominates the left side, while a central sub-dial recalls a tachometer, elegantly displaying hours and minutes. On the right, an 80-hour power reserve gauge balances the design—though in true Bugatti fashion, it holds a secret.

Inspired by the hypercar’s radical new V16 engine, the timepiece features a sapphire-crystal engine block automaton. With the push of a button, a single-axis crankshaft brings 16 titanium pistons to life in mesmerizing motion. It’s as much theater as it is engineering—a spectacle that blurs the line between performance and artistry.

A Case of Identity

Just as the hypercar’s silhouette is unmistakable, so too is the timepiece’s 52 x 44 mm case. White gold contours echo the Tourbillon’s flowing lines, complete with miniature design nods to grilles, radiators, and even side windows. Laser-etched grids and sapphire crystal inlays allow a glimpse into the inner workings, evoking the voyeuristic thrill of peering into a Bugatti engine bay.

The Baguette: A New Benchmark

If the Tourbillon timepiece is the mechanical equivalent of the hypercar, then the Bugatti Tourbillon Baguette is its jewel-encrusted counterpart. Limited to just 18 pieces, the Baguette elevates Jacob & Co.’s craft into haute joaillerie territory.

Its 18K white gold case is sheathed in 328 baguette-cut diamonds and accented with 18 baguette-cut rubies—the latter evoking the crimson glow of Bugatti’s taillights. The result is nothing short of dazzling, a watch that marries automotive symbolism with jewelry artistry. Seventeen carats of diamonds transform the Tourbillon into not just a timepiece, but a wearable objet d’art.

Craft Without Compromise

Both car and watch stand as a reminder of what Bugatti and Jacob & Co. do best: pushing the boundaries of what is possible. “From the beginning of our partnership, Bugatti and Jacob & Co. have had the honor of channeling our unique, world-leading skillsets into horological creations that stand the test of time,” says Wiebke Ståhl, Managing Director at Bugatti International S.A.

In other words, this is about more than exclusivity—it’s about legacy. With the Tourbillon, Bugatti isn’t just setting lap records. It’s redefining the very language of luxury performance. Whether on the road or on the wrist, the Tourbillon is a statement that time, like speed, waits for no one.

Source: Bugatti