From the archives … (pics from an auction house and from other online sources) Ö- Retrrapante vertical column mono-pusher chronograph. Ö- Manual wind. Ö- 40 mm case diameter. Ö- Solid gold case and applied Arabic numbers and hands. Ö- Heat blued central c...
A batch of 50 Venus 179 movement/ were found and went to auction. GP, Paul Picot and Panerai bought them. Was there one more company in that list …? Hmm 🤔 The finishing done by GP is considered the best between the the other 2 brands from what I have read...
Never ending dreams of beautifully polished intricate ticking time devices. We should create an association that buys watches for his members so everybody in this forum can try and wear a huge number of watches that normally wouldn’t be able to wear in a ...
BTW, looking at this movement pictures would anyone be able to comment on the level of finishing vs. Lemania-based chronos from Patek, Breguet and Vacheron please? Thanks!
To answer your question on finishing, I think as good as what you see on Lemania movements from patek etc. The main thing about this GP is the Venus 179 movement is much more rare and no longer in production. So finishing aside, it’s more about the calbre...
of course I get the story about this movement, but still interested in understanding whether it is finished industrially or above that. It is clearly not the level of AD17 from Atelier de Chronometrie but hope it is somewhere close to Patek 5070. Thanks.
I was lucky to be able to own or handle most of Venus based rattrapante chronographs with the exception of Paul Picot and Parmigiani: Franck Muller, Daniel Roth, Panerai, GP, UN. Daniel Roth had a best finishing by far, fairly close to the likes of Patek....