Vintage aficionados, a story you might enjoy; Eitan might remember this one ?
This seems to be the rarest of the Breitling Worldtimers - we have no
production figures, but almost none come up for sale and if they do,
most are in a sorry state, incorrect and/or ridiculously priced; they
were expensive watches when they were launched in the very late 1950s or
very early 1960s, same price levels as the Navitimer 806s - so
apparently the Unitime were only produced in very small quantities .
This Unitime ref. 2610, manufactured in 1961, was actually the first
Unitime I acquired, almost three years ago. Case, dial and world time
dial ring were in perfect condition, it came with it's original box and
the original manual - but the bezel insert was totally destroyed,
rendering it almost unusable.
First I waited and searched, hoping (childishly) a NOS insert would just
pop up, then the watch traveled to several restoration gurus; Craig in
the US was pessimistic (and rightly so) he would find somebody to
restore the bezel, Kirk Dial had tried in the past but refused to try
again - so Craig serviced it and suggested to just give up on trying to
"make it whole".
Then Germany, Spain - nobody had the die, nobody claimed to know how to
restore the anodized aluminum insert. My many collector friends tried
to help, some running around London; we thought about China, friends
were checking in Geneva; others in France - nada.
There were Unitime inserts from bakelite, but these were totally off -
wrong fonts, wrong material, wrong look and feel; even Aldo, the
milwatch uberguru from Milano, said he knew of no possibility do do it
correctly in anodized aluminum.
Years of searching, trying, waiting - here it is now with a quite
correct world time bezel, surprisingly fabbed by ourselves (a small
electronics manufacturer with some "handy" graphics & metalworking
guys, but with absolutely ZERO watchmaking capabilities). ![]()
We painstakingly recreated the rather unique font, fabbed the inserts
from 0.3mm aluminum, found the right tool to reach the correct doming,
made a dozen anodized samples, tried printing and failed - in the end
succeeded quite nicely with a high resolution engraving laser. Still not
totally perfect (we were afraid of "doming" the anodized and engraved
inserts, so the cutting depth of the laser is not totally uniform), but
quite workable.
Do not ask how many man hours went into this, please. 








and finally, some family pics of Breitling World Time watches; a 1955 Unitime ref. 1-260
and a 1969 Unitime AVI
Unsure if to - very respectfully - work a little bit on the hands lume, but basically: Happy Fred.