Montblanc Nicolas Rieussec Chronograph Review
Review

Montblanc Nicolas Rieussec Chronograph Review

By KMII · May 13, 2017 · 37 replies
KMII
WPS member · Montblanc forum
37 replies11672 views2 photos
f 𝕏 in 💬 🔗

KMII offers a compelling review of the Montblanc Nicolas Rieussec Chronograph, nearly a decade after its initial release, following a visit to Montblanc's Vienna Boutique. He highlights how this monopusher chronograph, with its in-house movement and unique rotating disc display, solidified Montblanc's reputation as a serious watchmaker. This article provides a fresh perspective on a significant piece of modern horology.

37 collectors discussing this on the WatchProSite forumJoin the Conversation →
At the recent reopening event of Montblanc's Vienna Boutique I have had the opportunity to more extensively try out some of their collection. 

And one of the pieces I have not yet tried - mea culpa as a mod (albeit quite newly minted) has been the Nicolas Rieussec. Apart from the Villeret collection, this is probably the line that did most to establish Montblanc as a serious watch maker - a monopusher chronograph with an in-house movement (hand wound and automatic versions exist), and a novel (or very traditional - depending on perspective) way of reading the chronograph. 





The rotating discs instead of hands are true to the first time writers of Nicolas Rieussec in terms of design aesthetic for a start. In addition they add an element of serenity that no other chronograph possesses in my humble opinion. While a collection of moving hands in the more conventional versions adds some drama, the disc movements are much more understated and exude calm. 

Definitely a very fitting choice for a watch that's on the dressier side and that has no pretensions to sportiness. 

The activation is with a monopusher, placed somewhat unconventionally at 8 o'clock - so most of the time (i.e. when you're not timing) it hides under the sleeve. Again well thought through for a more formal piece. 

The operation is butter smooth and thereby also fitting. 

Otherwise the watch sits comfortably on the wrist, even if it is quite large. The rose gold version I have tried is quite heavy - so definitely not a piece you will forget you are wearing. 

So overall I have to say I liked it quite a lot. Not one that has been discussed here much recently but even if not quite new anymore it is both a serious piece of horology and a charming wrist companion at the same time. 

Market snapshot

As of today, 60 Montblanc listings are live on the eBay market and 32 collector listings on the WatchProSite marketplace.

Key Points from the Discussion

Advertisement
The Discussion
JR
jrwong23 (aka watchthebin)
May 14, 2017
I love the Nicolas Riussec :)

if only they come in a smaller case of 40mm or 41mm. 43mm is a tad big for me (and it's thick too). I love this collection even if my wrist can't carry one. Cheers Robin

AL
Alkiro1
May 14, 2017
I agree about the size

I tried one several years ago and I had the same feeling. It is a little bit too big for my wrist too. Nevertheless, I really love this timepiece but in its manual winding versions (only two if I'm right). Best wishes Alkiro

JR
jrwong23 (aka watchthebin)
May 14, 2017
I'm with you Alkiro [nt]

AL
Alkiro1
May 14, 2017
I was sure of that ;-)

Best wishes Alkiro

KM
KMII
May 14, 2017
I hear you :)

Yet to try the manual one...

AL
Alkiro1
May 14, 2017
They're quite rare with only two reference. I don't know if they're still available today in the Montblanc catalogue

Best wishes Alkiro

Continue the conversation

This thread is active on the Montblanc forum with 37 replies. Share your knowledge with fellow collectors.

Join the Discussion →