Piaget Altiplano Ultimate Concept watch now available

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I thought this watch was really cool when it came out 2 years ago but it was only a concept watch then i.e. not available commercially. At a maximum thickness of 2 mm, it is the thinnest mechanical watch ever made.

It looks stylish too, with its exposed movement yet clear dial and hands.



 
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I remember reading about this watch when it first came out and it sounded crazy. They were saying you had to be careful strapping one the watch because it might flex the entire case/movement.

Amazing they are getting this into production.
 
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...yet clear dial and hands.


I'd like to object to that statement - I couldn't find the dial and thought you'd posted photos of the rear 😵‍💫
 
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I couldn't find the dial and thought you'd posted photos of the rear
LOL. Let me rephrase that. The dial is indeed busy but the time subdial is pretty clear to me.
Often watches with visible movements (e.g. skeletonized) I cannot see the hands through all the clutter.
 
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I’m interested when they bring out an automatic wind with perpetual calendar that is even slimmer! 😁 In other words, not for me.
 
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The biggest issue will be to find aftermarket strap as slim as the case 😗

I would probably never have the money to buy it, and buy other watches if I had that kind of money, but I like it TBH.
A shame the website misses a configurator to play with all the combinations. I would have love to configure it and choose something that suits well my virtual DB11 😁
 
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All of that and they don’t even show how that crown works? And what is the price? Just curious.
 
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I’m interested when they bring out an automatic wind with perpetual calendar that is even slimmer! 😁 In other words, not for me.
How about if it also had a "sonnerie"? 😝
 
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All of that and they don’t even show how that crown works? And what is the price? Just curious.

I recall the watch had a small tool to extend the crown.

The price? If you have to ask, then...
 
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I'd like to object to that statement - I couldn't find the dial and thought you'd posted photos of the rear 😵‍💫

I thought exactly the same.
Invicta called, they want their design back.
😁::stirthepot::
 
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Good luck wearing a watch this thin, the crystal is only 0.2mm thick. Any slight flex in the case putting it on or taking it off will put that crystal under great stress, and if you put any impact on it while on your wrist, goodbye crystal. Some years ago Concord had their Delirium series that got thinner and thinner, eventually reaching <1.5mm, but they were unwearable, the crystal would pop off by putting stress on the case as the strap was tensioned. This Piaget is a great achievement for sure, but it isn't a real practical watch in day to day life.
 
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Good luck wearing a watch this thin, the crystal is only 0.2mm thick. Any slight flex in the case putting it on or taking it off will put that crystal under great stress, and if you put any impact on it while on your wrist, goodbye crystal. Some years ago Concord had their Delirium series that got thinner and thinner, eventually reaching <1.5mm, but they were unwearable, the crystal would pop off by putting stress on the case as the strap was tensioned. This Piaget is a great achievement for sure, but it isn't a real practical watch in day to day life.

Could you elaborate on a "practical watch in day to day life." It's a dress watch...

The Delirum is a 1970's design. Lot's of things have changed in engineering capabilities since:
Maybe the case is stiffer than the Delirium.
Maybe the crystal is mounted such that case flexure won't stress the crystal beyond catastrophic damage.
Maybe the crystal, being so thin, is more flexible and can withstand flexure without catastrophic damage.

Well maybe Piaget have a bunch of dumb engineers designing expensive watches that can break apart when one wears it in its intended use.
Edited:
 
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I thought this watch was really cool when it came out 2 years ago but it was only a concept watch then i.e. not available commercially. At a maximum thickness of 2 mm, it is the thinnest mechanical watch ever made.

It looks stylish too, with its exposed movement yet clear dial and hands.



There was a point where I besotted by this watch. Glad I did not act on it.
 
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Could you elaborate on a "practical watch in day to day life." It's a dress watch...

The Delirum is a 1970's design. Lot's of things have changed in engineering capabilities since:
Maybe the case is stiffer than the Delirium.
Maybe the crystal is mounted such that case flexure won't stress the crystal beyond catastrophic damage.
Maybe the crystal, being so thin, is more flexible and can withstand flexure without catastrophic damage.

Well maybe Piaget have a bunch of dumb engineers designing expensive watches that can break apart when one wears it in its intended use.
The movement and the case are integrated together, it is a single piece. You could compare this to how car frames evolved. A regular watch is like a car with a ladder frame or a perimeter frame. This Altiplano is more like an unibody.
Plus, from what I saw they used 18k gold for the Delirium: not really the most rigid alloy. This Altiplano uses a Cobalt alloy: those are much more rigid than any stainless steel.