Joao_BRA
·Hi all,
I've been doing some tests with an Omega Calibre 1120 and thought it would be interesting to share.
- Last service: December 2025 (1 month ago)
1. Power reserve test via manual winding:
- Watch stopped, dial up.
- 60 turns of the crown (each turn rotating the crown between 240 and 360°).
- Power reserve: 47h31min
2. Automatic winding test:
- Watch stopped, placed on the wrist and started by wrist movement.
a) Wear for 4h08min (less to moderate active activities, such as driving, using a computer, sitting for a conversation, etc.). Power reserve of 8h02min.
b) Wear for 1h54 min (more active activities, done in an office, almost entirely standing, including some short walks). Power reserve of 8h22min.
My conclusions:
1. The advertised 44h power reserve is slightly underestimated, at least for recently revised movements.
2. Wearing life style greatly influences the power reserve reload by automatic, but a metric I consider reasonable is to think that each hour of wearing gives us between 2 and 4 hours of power reserve.
What do you think? Anyone with other data?
I've been doing some tests with an Omega Calibre 1120 and thought it would be interesting to share.
- Last service: December 2025 (1 month ago)
1. Power reserve test via manual winding:
- Watch stopped, dial up.
- 60 turns of the crown (each turn rotating the crown between 240 and 360°).
- Power reserve: 47h31min
2. Automatic winding test:
- Watch stopped, placed on the wrist and started by wrist movement.
a) Wear for 4h08min (less to moderate active activities, such as driving, using a computer, sitting for a conversation, etc.). Power reserve of 8h02min.
b) Wear for 1h54 min (more active activities, done in an office, almost entirely standing, including some short walks). Power reserve of 8h22min.
My conclusions:
1. The advertised 44h power reserve is slightly underestimated, at least for recently revised movements.
2. Wearing life style greatly influences the power reserve reload by automatic, but a metric I consider reasonable is to think that each hour of wearing gives us between 2 and 4 hours of power reserve.
What do you think? Anyone with other data?