Collector @ArkJasdain shared photos of the Piaget regulation box to me, see at bottom. He also said on Reddit: QUOTE Yes, the original iterations of the 7P movement did indeed have the capability to have the rate reprogrammed with a wireless induction typ
I’m talking about the Glashütte Original Seventies , specifically, the Chronograph Panorama Date, Ref. #1-37-02-08-02-70. This is the smoked gray dial limited edition version on a steel bracelet. While this is the reference I happen to own, it can probabl
I cleaned up or noted some typographical errors, including one within a cited source 😅 And if I am shown to be wrong on the Beta 4 - 7P connection, things get even more interesting because then there is a completely unknown Piaget quartz caliber lurking a
I have only been able to skim your article so far, but I find the story of this Beta 4 caliber developed at the request of Piaget and renamed 7P quite fascinating. I will read your article fully a little later. Thank you for sharing. Best, Emmanuel
I would like to share original research that points quite strongly to the Piaget cal. 7P, usually described uncritically as Piaget’s “first in house quartz movement”, being a Centre Eletronique Horloger invention internally called the Beta 4. I draw on a
When I started paying attention to high horology - long before I could actually afford one - I was heavily influenced by the Holy Trinity marketing. I considered PP, AP and VC to be absolutely pure, independent family owned (or at least privately owned) m
This Watch is Pure Hedonism, I love it ❤️ Pic Source & Credit: Monochrome monochrome-watches.com My Dream is to see it in Platinum with the gadroons in black enamel
Happened to see the Andy Warhol edition from Piaget today... In YG, the stepped case is quite substantial in size and presence....measuring 45 x 43mm ! But the raison d'etre is the dial.... 4 piece dial with Onyx as base and with 3 stones, Yellow Serpenti