Showing at WatchTime New York 2017: Breguet Marine Équation Marchante 5887


America’s luxury watch show, WatchTime New York, is less than two weeks away as we continue to spotlight some of the most important timepieces that guests will discover there. Breguet’s Marine Équation Marchante 5887, which stole the show for many at this year’s Baselworld, will be among these timepieces. Here is what you should know about it.

The Breguet Marine Équation Marchante 5887 is unique in that it displays the running equation of time at a glance using a “running” (marchante) central hand on the dial rather than on a subdial that shows the minutes to be added or subtracted to the current civil time. It even displays the cam that controls the equation-of-time function – alongside a tourbillon and a perpetual calendar. It celebrates Abraham-Louis Breguet’s appointment in 1814 as a member of the Bureau des longitudes in Paris, a group of experts who measured the earth’s physical properties. As the official marine chronometer maker to the French Royal Navy, Breguet was a key member of the group.

Breguet Marine Équation Marchante 5887
Breguet Marine Équation Marchante 5887

The equation of time is essentially the addition of a sundial to the modern wristwatch. It measures time according to the current position of the sun, by which the length of a day can vary by -16 to +14 minutes compared to average or civil time. The difference is called the equation of time. For practical reasons, man has divided each year into 365-and-a-quarter days, each day into 24 hours, and the hours into 60 minutes each. However, because the Earth’s orbit is elliptical rather than circular, the time in relation to the sun varies daily. It is exactly twenty-four hours long on only four days: April 15th, June 14th, September 1st, and December 24th.

Because these variations occur identically on the same dates, they can be programmed into a watch movement by means of a cam making one complete rotation a year. The cam is often linked directly to a perpetual calendar so that the display of the equation of time always corresponds to the current date. The cam on the Breguet Marine Equation Marchante 5887 is shaped like a figure eight, and visible on the dial through a window that also displays the tourbillon carriage. It runs on a sapphire disk so as not to block the view of the tourbillon.

The figure eight-shaped cam is visible on the dial, along with the tourbillon cage.

There are different ways to show the equation of time. Most watches use a hand sweeping a subsidiary dial or arc, graduated from -16 to +14 minutes. Only a few have a running equation of time, which consists of a second minute hand that runs according to solar time, making the difference readable at a glance on the central dial. This hand on the Marine Équation Marchante 5887 is identified by a sun motif. A fourth central hand, tipped by an anchor motif in honor of marine chronometers, indicates the date on a retrograde scale as part of the perpetual calendar function. In keeping with the marine theme, the inner dial is engraved to resemble waves.

Breguet Marine Marchante dial CU - hands
The running equation-of-time hand has a solar motif.

The self-winding Caliber 581DPE runs at 4 Hz and includes a 60-second tourbillon with a titanium carriage and a silicon balance. It has an 80-hour power reserve, the status of which is displayed in a very subtle aperture between 7 and 9 o’clock. Thanks to a peripheral rotor, the decorated movement can be seen through the caseback, including bridges engraved to depict a the Royal Louis, a ship in the French Royal Navy, and a barrel engraved with a windrose motif. The crown is topped with a polished B and, in another departure from the traditional Marine design, the fluted case band is more widely grooved. There are two references, one in 18k rose gold, priced at $215,000, and the other in platinum (pictured), priced at $230,400, with a blue dial. The cases are 43.9 mm wide and water-resistant to 100 meters.

Breguet Marine Marchante - back
The movement boasts an engraved French Royal Navy ship and a windrose motif on the barrel.

The Breguet Marine Équation Marchante 5887, which has made infrequent appearances in the U.S. since its launch at Baselworld, will be available to see and try on at WatchTime New York, on October 13-14 at Gotham Hall. Don’t miss your opportunity to experience it in person; click here to order tickets.

 

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  1. Lawrence Dauch

    An exquisite watch with so many new functions. So precise so well proportioned and beautiful. I am amazed at the workmanship and introduction of new ways to tell time.

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