gup502
577
Thanks for explaining. I see how it can be a bit confusing.
At least for me it is. Compax referred to 3 complications, chronograph, date and moon phase.
Chronograph usually has a an hour and minute dial. There are already two sub-dials.
Date sometimes can also be displayed using a dial. Usually it is a date window though.
Moon phase has to be a sub-dial.
Tri-Compax, tri the prefix means three.
But then it can also be used for watches with four sub-dials as you explained it.
That is something I have learnt. If there is no image of the watch, it is described as Tri-Compax, that means the watch must have at least three sub-dials and maybe four.
Bi-Compax refers to watches with two sub-dials, that is easy to remember. Prefix "bi" tells all.
If someone is a bit slack, a watch with a chronograph (one hour and one minute) and a moon phase, three sub-dials altogether, and it is only called Compax, it is not specific enough.
It should be called Tri-Compax.
Sorry am I making it more complicated for myself.