Sequential Two S210: Sport Hail Caesar !

Sequential Two S210 Sport

CASE : 56 elements, made of titanium with sapphire lateral insert, titanium upperprotective ring, domed sapphire crystal,sapphire crystal back 30m

DIAMETER : 46.4mm

MOVEMENT : mechanicalself-winding (Caliber MCT-S2.0, 50h powerreserve), 654 components, gold micro-rotor,patented energy storage system, balancespring with Breguet overcoil, chamferingand hand-polished Côtes de Genève

FUNCTIONS : hours on prisms, pointer-typeminutes

DIAL : four modules composed offive rotating triangular prisms, combinedwith a jumping central disk open to revealthe reference prism, traditional minutes

STRAP : rubber with steel folding clasp(available in customized version)

WATER RESISTANCE : 30m

LIMITED TO 25 PIECES

The Sequential has been turning heads for 10 years, first in its square case of the One version, and then in a rounded iteration – like an arena staging gladiators appearing and vanishing as the prisms roll. Boldly clad in black titanium armor, this sporty version of the Sequential Two also seems like a protective shield against the ravages of time and a light sword carving out a path for the minutes. The case is indeed equipped with a cover protecting the watch glass that contributes to making it even more resistant to the trials facing any athlete. However, the lucky number 8 visible at noon when the sun is at its highest point is soon hidden by the central jumping disk that will reveal the 9 on the following sector. Devotees of fine mechanisms discovering MCT today are as amazed as ever by the thrilling sight of this large sequential hours display staged by these four modules comprising five prisms each. By way of reminder, each hours module consists of five prisms shaped like elongated triangles, rotating to display three numbers on each module. The largest mechanical hours indication on the market is thus provided by four modules in turn, thereby enabling the Sequential Two to showcase 12 different looks in the course of the day. Thumbs up !

Journaliste spécialisée en horlogerie, la plume de Marie présente les nouveautés tout en s'occupant de la rubrique Architecture.

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