... reflecting on the historical importance of that number for divers when using pure oxygen in old times. For oxygen turning toxic at a depth of 7 meters or a pressure of 1.7, this number was essential to know at the time.
I immediately changed from the original sailcloth to a Bathyscaphe green Nato with steel hardware. Since there is no brushed 23mm steel buckle available (at least not yet), I chose a titanium buckle, which is close enough in terms of aesthetics. Hope you ...
I cringe ever so slightly at the Rolex-ish 12 reverse triangle... and frankly other Rolex dial design cues... at 3 and 9... these are serious quibbles.....a brand so deeply historic might find its own design cues... or else why not buy a Rolex... but this...
... with the dial and hands originating from the early 1950‘s models. The Rotomatic Incabloc indeed had a diamond and not a triangle at the 12 position, which in the Blancpain world is a reminiscence to the Tornek, which had exactly that triangle. The dot...
your reply and comments are watch-literature. Thanks very much as usual for your unbelievable pictures and in depth knowledge--you know, as an obsessed collector, in the last 24 hours or so... all I thought was, DAMN that Blancpain is SO COOL!!!
Blancpain milspec models from the early 60’s also had the reverse triangle - this certainly wasn’t just a Rolex thing. I’m totally ok with Blancpain giving a nod to their past.
agree...no need to cringe, but... I wish at the end of the day... regardless of technical nitty gritty watch history--- (and I say this frankly wanting this watch) that it just did not in any way in terms of dial, remind one of Rolex. Cheers.
is not proprietary to Rolex... but despite whatever is true and factual about watch design, Rolex still first comes to mind when the reverse triangle is seen. This is unfair, bc of the true history of various brands, but...
... reflecting on the historical importance of that number for divers when using pure oxygen in old times. For oxygen turning toxic at a depth of 7 meters or a pressure of 1.7, this number was essential to know at the time. Cheers Henrik