autoevolution
 

Tag Heuer Monaco Twenty Four Chronograph to Honor Le Mans

We witnessed these past few days an all out offensive from watch manufacturers, who are going over the top to release new themed chronographs. We started with the Ferrari Chronograph Red Dial and the Ferrari Chronograph Yellow Dial, we then went through the details of Breitling's Bentley Motors Speed and got to the Audi Centennial Timepiece chronograph. See a pattern?

So it's once again time for a watch-automotive icon encounter. Swiss specialists TAG Heuer have just released the Monaco Twenty Four Chronograph, an idea spawned from the supercharged 24h Le Mans race.

The watch is defined by the large 24 and the blue and orange livery of Gulf Oil. Based on Steve McQueen's square shaped Monaco, the watch features a see-through dial and is powered by the company's Calibre 36 Moving (36,000 beats per hour) which is visible through the sapphire crystal case back.

"The Monaco Twenty Four Concept Chronograph is inspired by the phenomenally powerful race cars, true marvels of state-of-the-art engineering and design that compete each June in the 24 hours of Le Mans, " Jean-Christophe Babin, TAG Heuer CEO said in a release.

The Monaco Twenty Four Chronograph's Calibre 36 movement is incased in a PVD case, suspended in an "energy manifold" steel tube housing, reminiscent of a race car driver's protective cockpit cage.

The components of the watch are insulated with shock absorbing "composite filter" materials used in aerospace and racing engineering. The Advanced Dynamic Absorption System (ADAS) can protect the watch in case of an impact of 24,000 G, the equivalent of a 20 meter fall.

A world premier is the use of a centrifugal system. The three arrows on the annular oscillating weight display its working rotation, as they are visible from the front of the dial and through the case back.
If you liked the article, please follow us:  Google News icon Google News Youtube Instagram
About the author: Daniel Patrascu
Daniel Patrascu profile photo

Daniel loves writing (or so he claims), and he uses this skill to offer readers a "behind the scenes" look at the automotive industry. He also enjoys talking about space exploration and robots, because in his view the only way forward for humanity is away from this planet, in metal bodies.
Full profile

 

Would you like AUTOEVOLUTION to send you notifications?

You will only receive our top stories