
Foversta's press release on the URWERK EMC introduces a groundbreaking concept in mechanical watchmaking: the first high-end timepiece with owner-adjustable precision. This innovation challenges traditional notions of chronometry by empowering the wearer to monitor and fine-tune their watch's timing. It's a pivotal development for collectors interested in the future of mechanical accuracy and interactive horology.
URWERK presents the EMC: The first high-end mechanical watch with âartificial intelligenceâ
For URWERK, a precision timepiece should have at its base a movement that is accurate, reliable and long lasting. Such a movement should meet specific criteria including accuracy in 5 positions between -4 seconds and +6 seconds over 24 hours. However, while it is one thing to regulate an accurate watch in the controlled world of a workshop, performance in the sometimes-extreme real world, i.e. on the wrist, can be very different. Changes in position and temperature, and shocks, can all adversely affect isochronism (timing regularity) of a wristwatch. The challenge with EMC was in developing a mechanical watch that can be regulated by its owner to obtain the finest chronometric performance. EMC is the first precision mechanical watch that enables timing to be both easily monitored and easily adjusted by its owner.

With EMC, not only can the wearer obtain the precise
timing rate on demand, they can then use that information to accurately adjust
the timing of their watch to suit their own personal
rhythm. Electro Mechanical
Control (EMC) is the world's first precision mechanical watch in which the
timing can be monitored and adjusted by the user to suit their lifestyle â EMC
is fully interactive.
Please note that EMC is a fully 100% mechanical
watch. The electronics have absolutely no effect on the movement; they only
enable monitoring of the movement's precision in a similar way that the
electronic speedometer or rev counter of a car has no effect on the mechanical
engine and gearbox.


EMC features a
deconstructed dial with four separate indications: A clockwise tour of the
displays, from top left, presents the: on demand, precision indicator (instantaneous
rate delta ?) ranging from -20 to + 20 seconds per day; seconds dial with
counter-balanced seconds hand; hours and minutes; and 80-hour power reserve
indicator. Turning EMC over reveals the fully in-house movement with the
integrated circuit board â the EMC 'brain' â, the top of one of the two
mainspring barrels near the crown and the top of the balance wheel and optical
sensor on the winding handle side.

âOur idea for ??EMC goes back almost six years and is a natural continuation of my work as a watchmaker," says Felix Baumgartner, co-founder of URWERK. âLike all watchmakers, I have on my bench a Witschi â an instrument to test the precision of my work. This impartial and uncompromising judge âlistensâ to the rhythm of the balance and makes a verdict on the performance of the movement by measuring the timing rate, the number of seconds the movement gains or loses in 24 hours. This device is what I always refer back to; you might say itâs my only boss in the atelier!â

The audacious idea to incorporate a Witschi-like
measuring instrument in a mechanical watch became a veritable quest for URWERK.
âEMC allows you to
obtain a reliable and accurate piece of data on your timepiece at the touch of
a button â information that until now has been the preserve of professional
watchmakers,â says
Baumgartner. âUsing
this information, you can fine-tune one of the most exciting, most jubilant
mechanisms invented â the mechanical watch â all by
yourself.â
At its heart, EMC has a triple objective: to show how external
parameters (positional changes, temperature and pressure) influence the timing
of the movement; to enable the wearer to adjust the timing; and to facilitate
interactivity between the timepiece and its
owner.
EMC is inherently a precision mechanical watch with
an in-house movement conceived, developed and crafted in the URWERK ateliers in
Zurich and calibrated by URWERK in Geneva. The movement meets the most
stringent quality control, with its chronometric performance tested in five
positions during a 30-day cycle to ensure that it meets the highest standards
for a precision watch.

- A bespoke balance wheel made of ARCAP, an alloy long admired by URWERK for its non-magnetic and anti-corrosion properties. From the very first glance, the originality of this specially-developed balance is striking. Its perfectly linear morphology is the result of careful calculations to optimise data from the optical sensor, maximise aerodynamic efficiency and minimise loss of amplitude.

- Power is provided by two large mainspring barrels in series, mounted vertically on a single shaft. These provide a long 80-hour power reserve, which is conducive to stable linear timing performance.

- The timing adjustment screw is accessible on the back of the watch and allows the owner to make very fine adjustments to the balance rate regulator by changing the active length of the balance spring by turning a simple screw.

To monitor and evaluate the mechanical movement, anâ electronic brainâ was then needed. Olivier Evalet, a software developer who is passionate about software and computer engineering, has been instrumental in helping this bold project succeed: "The idea was to use precision optics, i.e. light, to measure the precision of a mechanical movement. The accuracy we managed to achieve is better than 10 microseconds. And we have created a reliable system that is designed to work over the long term. The power for EMC's electronic "brain" derives not from a simple battery but a super capacitor that even after 100,000 to 200,000 charge/discharge cycles loses very little performance. We also chose a high-frequency oscillator with an extremely long life â its instability is only 3 parts per million over a full year. "
The innovative EMC timing rate monitoring
unit has been developed to include the following:

- An optical sensor on the balance wheel capturing the
precise rate of oscillation of the 4 hertz / 28,800 vph regulator,
over a period of 3
seconds. This sensor consists of a transmitter and a receiver
positioned either side of the balance, and is triggered manually by pressing a
button on the left side of the case.
- A 16,000,000-hertz
electronic oscillator
This provides EMCâs reference timing rate. The
performance of the balance of EMC (4hz) is compared against this lightning-fast
oscillator to obtain the most accurate measurement possible.
-
Artificial intelligence (the computer)
This computer determines the difference
between the timing rate of the movement and that of the reference oscillator.
Each microsecond difference between the two values is expressed as a gain or
loss of a second per day of the timing rate. A variation of just 0.0000014 of a
second per half-vibration translates as a variation of a second per
day.
- Manual-winding generator (the
generator):
EMCâs monitoring unit (the optical sensor and the
computer) is powered by a micro-generator made by the Swiss company Maxon,
which is well known for developing motors for NASAâs Mars
rovers.

Martin Frei â designer and co-founder of URWERK - had the considerable task of bringing all of EMCâs technical elements together in a visually-appealing and comfortably-wearing wristwatch. "At URWERK, the starting point of our creations is usually a sketch of the completed watch that embodies mine and Felixâs ideas before the micro-mechanics are fully developed. But with EMC, the technical features of the timepiece were already established and this made my task that little bit trickier. We miniaturised the EMC components to the extreme and this allowed me some leeway in terms of design. My approach was one of pragmatism â from incorporating the folding crank into the caseband, to making the electrical energy storing capacitor part of the case. In terms of design, you can spot the influence of objects that are dear to me: the crank echoes that of old SLR cameras; and the design of the balance wheel is reminiscent of a vintage 1/4 inch tape reel.

EMC marks the dawn of a new era, that of an interactive smart mechanical watch allowing the owner to gauge the precision of their timepieceâs chronometric performance and fine-tune it to better suit their daily rhythm and pace of life.

Technical
specifications
Case
Material: Titanium and
steel
Dimensions: 43mm width, 51mm length, 15.8mm
height
Crystal: Sapphire crystal
Water resistance: Pressure
tested to 30m / 3ATM
Finishing: satin finish;
shot-blasting
Movement
Calibre UR-EMC calibre conceived, developed
and manufactured by URWERK
Escapement Swiss lever
escapement
Balance wheel in
ARCAP P40, linear balance coupled to the optical sensor
Frequency
28,800 vph â 4Hz
Balance spring Flat
Energy source Vertically
mounted double mainspring barrels, connected in series
Power reserve
80 hours
Winding Manual winding
Finishing: Côtes de Genève,
snailing, micro-bead blasting , polished bevels on screw
heads
Artificial
intelligence
Generator MaxonÂŽ generator with manual
winding charging super capacitor
EMC system Optical sensor controlled
by an integrated circuit board ; 16'000'000hz reference
oscillator
Indications Hours, minutes, seconds; precision delta, power
reserve. Timing adjusment screw
please click on the link below: I hope to be able to see the watch soon! Best regards. Fx
And interview with Felix on the watch creation and possibilities... Best, Horo
Adjustment Mechanical watches are usually adjusted to several positions(5 here). Does that mean I need to run the calibrator once per orientation and adjust the screw setting to the average value?
Ronald, :) We aim to serve.................. Regards, MTF
Ronald, If you can't work it out, then I have no chance ! Your mechanical spatial aptitude is far advanced of mine. Even with the benefit of peeking at the press release diagrams before you, I have no clue. Regards, MTF
Really, with the greatest respect for Urwerk, I would rather have a watch that just keeps good time and does not require me to play with it in order to make it accurate. Basically all this effort has been expended in order to show me - at anytime - how inaccurate the EMC actually will be in daily use. The way that is achieved is Ăźbercool, and....so what? Wasn't the object of high end watchmaking to create timepieces that are accurate when they eave the watchmaker's bench? I would never buy this
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