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Breitling Navitimer
Breitling

Breitling Navitimer

$4,990
Sold / unavailable · analogshift.com · Watch
How many watches can you spot from a mile away? How many watches have come to define their genre? Not too many. Not too many at all.  Before the early 1950s, the concept of a civilian tool watch was a novel idea. Watch companies produced a few purpose-designed pieces for military use in the early 20th century, but most watches that were sold at retailers were designed with purely fashion in mind. In the 1950s and 1960s, the tool watch market exploded, fueled by the popularity of SCUBA diving and the growing interest in aviation. Breitling was one of the earliest manufactures to respond to the trend when it released the Navitimer in 1954. We’ve been referring to the Navitimer as a watch, but that’s not quite right — it’s really a wrist-worn navigation computer. The Navitimer’s most distinctive feature, the slide rule bezel, was used by pilots to calculate airspeed, ascent and descent rates, flight time, distance traveled, fuel consumption and even imperial-to-metric unit conversions. The Navitimer truly is a mechanical computer, and also happens to be one of the best damn looking watches out there. How cool is that? This particular model is a Navitimer 41 from the 2020s. Housed in a 41mm stainless steel case with a sapphire crystal, a signed crown, and a bi-directional slide rule bezel, it features a luminous, cream-colored matte dial with applied, gold-tone indices, a matching, gold-toned ‘sword’ handset, a triple-register chronograph display, a date window at 11 o’clock, and Super-LumiNova lume. Powered by the Breitling B01 automatic chronometer movement and paired to a signed, brown leather strap with a signed, stainless steel pin buckle, this elegant, two-tone take on the world’s most famous pilot’s watch is a guaranteed crowd pleaser.  We’re sure you’ll agree!
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