Sorry, no pictures - no camera!
But you can find some great images and reports by searching the forums using "Dornbluth" and "Dornblueth".
I use my 99.2 mainly as a deskclock - actually on a shelf behind my computer, in its nice burlwood box. That way I can instantly check out out the time while I sit here typing. In fact it is the device I most look at for getting the time in this particular room, never from the monitor screen except for the occasional satellite or atomic settings.
Then comes the urge to take it out of the box and simply go off with it into the streets! If rarely, because there is fierce competition from some of the others, like a Sarpaneva K2, for daily wear and just getting about town - using my feet and the public transportation systems (I don't even own a car).
Or simply to admire the movement with it's swan-neck regulator and engraving, and ponder upon the people who made, and are continuing to make it and the others in their line. A tribute to Unitas - or the parts they use from it - but more to the Dornblüths themselves!
Sure, I keep it wound. It gains about 5 seconds, day after day. This Ur-version has no hacking seconds, which makes it even "purer" for me.
Another watch I own with a Unitas 6498 is a LE Maurice Lacroix Masterpiece Lune Retrograde in YG with Breguet-type hands, Calibre 104. Very pretty, even beautiful from the dial side. Rhodium on the gears but unfortunately no blued slots on the large blued screwheads and so merely (and impurely) decorative. The whole back side tends toward "bling" and is no way as interesting or enjoyable as the Dornbluth, but still nicely finished for a factory product of that (golden?) age in ML‘s history. Goes "ratch, ratch" when I wind it, but not unpleasantly, thanks to lots of calendar complications and a RDM.
Now I wish I could give you a picture of that one!
Best from
Amery