I really do miss the old AP... such a shame the Tradition line was discontinued. Clearly not successful, but I wonder if it was simply misunderstood and not marketed correctly? This particular model is superb, but, personally, I prefer the Tradition perpe
I prefer the regular double balance openworked models by a good bit over this one. For perpetual calendar, similar thought as M4. I prefer a solid dial for legibility. I still have trouble reading the small indicators with my eyes, so a PC is not a watch
The openworked Ref. 16204XT.OO.1240XT.01 (caliber 7124) is made of titanium (with Bulk Metallic Glass or “BMG” accents) and is such a HEAVY hitter, yet SO SO LIGHT ! The workmanship is very fine under a loupe. The color is also interesting because it is j
Two Audemars Piguet references with an 18-carat sand gold case : Royal Oak Perpetual Calendar ref. 26674SG.OO.1320SG.01 with caliber 7138 - 41 x 9.5 mm case [RE]Master02 Selfwinding ref. 15240SG.OO.A347CR.01 with caliber 7129 - 41 x 9.7 mm case Right for
Here is an overview of the Royal Oak pocket watches that I have been able to identify . They fall into two generations : the first from the 1980s , the second from the 1990s . Enjoy and thanks for looking! Best, Emmanuel I. FIRST GENERATION OF ROYAL OAK P
I used to really like AP I have owned quite a few throughout my lifetime. I’ve had the AP jumbo 15202 in every dial color in ss and I had the ss perpetual calendar RO about 15 years ago. I regret selling that watch as well as the jumbos but I was anxious
Here are three examples of the Edward Piguet Skeleton Perpetual Calendar ref. 25734 . Two in platinum and one in rose gold . Case dimensions: 27.5 x 45 mm A/ REF. 25734PT - BLUE DIAL credit: @pygmaliongallery B/ REF. 25734PT - RED DIAL The wonderful hand-
To my ears, the modern 5078 5178 do not sound richer in tone than the Code. I think something about the microrotor muffles the sound, alongside any complication that is too well-packaged (3974 perpetual calendar, say). To the credit of AP, the Code MR is