Montre d'Aviateur Chronographe TOP GUN

IW388001

Montre d'Aviateur Chronographe TOP GUN View larger
Montre d'Aviateur Chronographe TOP GUN

Brand  : IWC
Collection  : Pilot's Watches
Model  : Montre d'Aviateur Chronographe TOP GUN
Reference  : IW388001
Complement : Black Ceramic - Black Fabric Strap
Year : 2012
Is not commercialised any more

11 900 €Recorded list price in FranceI WANT IT

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  • Brand  : IWC
    Collection  : Pilot's Watches
    Model  : Montre d'Aviateur Chronographe TOP GUN
    Reference  : IW388001
    Complement : Black Ceramic - Black Fabric Strap
    Year : 2012
    Is not commercialised any more
    List Price : 11 900 €
    Diameter : 46 mm
    Thickness : 16.50 mm
    Styles : Sporty
    Types : Self-winding
    Calibre : 89365
    Complication : Flyback Chronograph
    Small Seconds
    60-Minute Counter
    Stop second mechanism
    Case material : Black ceramic
    Case peculiarity : Screwed-down crown
    Anti-magnetic
    Water-resistance : 60 meters
    Dial color : Black
    Display : Luminescent hands
    Indexes : Luminescent
    Arabic numerals
    Triangles
    Baton-type
    Glass : Domed
    Sapphire
    Antireflective coating
    Strap material : Toile
    Strap color : Black
    Strap clasp : Folding buckle
    + More characteristics : Movement
    Jewels : 35
    Frequency : 4 Hz
    28.800 A/h
    Power reserve : 68 hours

    Dial
    Soft-iron inner case for protection against magnetic fields
    Glass secured against displacement by drop in air pressure

    Folding clasp in stainless steel 

    Glass Antireflective coating on both sides 

DESCRIPTION

  • 2012: the year of the high-flyers 

    The new Pilot’s Watches from IWC Schaffhausen

    IWC Schaffhausen gets off to a powerful start in 2012: the year of the Pilot’s Watch. With five new models, the TOP GUN collection establishes itself as an independent formation within the IWC Pilot’s Watch family. The year’s high-flyer is the TOP GUN Miramar: a tribute to the place in California where the myth of the elite pilots was born. And two Pilot’s Watches featuring many of fine watchmaking’s greatest achievements prepare for take off: the Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar TOP GUN and the Spitfire Perpetual Calendar Digital Date-Month. 

    “For the new TOP GUN Pilot’s Watches we drew on our long tradition of manufacturing unusual deck watches. In the1940s, Pilot’s Watches made in Schaffhausen were widely used as so-called B watches for flight navigation,” explains Georges Kern, CEO of IWC Schaffhausen. “Back then, only wristwatches with the highest possible precision were good enough for navigators: the pilot and his crew would synchronize their watches to the navigator’s.” Since the main priority for navigation is optimum legibility of the seconds and minutes, these two were often the only indicators shown on the outer ring; the hours would be relatively small and appeared on a central ring. This particular detail inspired IWC’s designers to display the hour circle and the chapter ring separately on the dials of the Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar and the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar.“The process of retracing the historic roots of our Pilot’s Watches gave us the idea of using the Miramar tocreateour first linewith a military-style design,” adds Christian Knoop, Creative Director at IWC. “This allows us to combine various styles in an imaginative way – even with luxury elements, if we wish. That’s one of the reasons the new Miramar line is such a perfect fit for IWC: premium-class watches with out- standing mechanics and a rugged, almost hardedged feel.” The dark, metallic sheen of the grey ceramic case and the matte anthracite of the dial all waken associations with precision instruments used in aviation. The use of specific camouflage colours such as beige for the hands and chapter ring, together with green for the strap, underscore the desired look. The textile strap leans visibly on the tough webbing belts. It is complemented by two high-tech materials, typical for TOP GUN, that were introduced to watchmaking by IWC as early as the 1980s: zirconium oxide for the case, along with titanium for the controls and the watch back. Both the Miramar models – like the entire TOP GUN collection, incidentally – are equipped with IWC-manufactured calibres. Like the other Big Pilot’s Watch,theBig Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar is equipped with the largest automatic movement made by IWC, with a power reserve of 168 hours. This also explains the 48-millimetre case diameter. The calibre 89365 found in the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramaris one of the most advanced and robust chronograph movements ever produced. It has a flyback function as well as an analogue display for stopped minutes and seconds. Commenting on the family’s positioning in the international watch market, Karoline Huber, Director Marketing & Communications at IWC, explains: “Flying enthusiasts all over the world think of Miramar in California as the birth place of the Top Gun legend. With our new TOP GUN Miramar design line, we are addressing watch lovers who consciously embrace IWC’s long-standing tradition of manufacturing Pilot’s Watches but who also wish to benefit from the technological advances of the 21st century and the inimitable quality typical of IWC.” 

    Classic TOP GUN collection: black and white with red highlights 

    The TOP GUN edition has held a permanent place in IWC Pilot’s Watches collection since 2007. The elaborately equipped Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar TOP GUNcomes with a host of advanced features, including a perpetual calendar with its four-digit year display, moon phase display and seven-day power reserve. The Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUNunites the clear-cut instrument look of the 1940s with ultra-modern watch technology. The tiny aircraft silhouette on the seconds hand creates an eye-catching signal-red highlight on the black-and-white dial. The Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN, which comes with a flyback function and protection against magnetic fields, is also equipped with an IWC-manufactured movement. 

    Rising fast: the Spitfire combines fabulous contours with first-class mechanics 

    In 2003, IWC Schaffhausen launched a Pilot’s Watch line that took not only its name from the Spitfire but also reflected the elegance and out- standing technology of the legendary single-propeller aircraft. Now, the designers and technicians have subjected the Spitfire watches to a thorough general overhaul. With a streamlined design and new features, they remain firmly on course for success. All the latest models are fitted with IWC-manufactured calibres. The gold and stainless-steel cases are meticulously machined by hand; the result is a vibrant interplay of shiny, silky matte and structured surfaces. The sun-pattern finish gives the slate-coloured dial a metallic sheen that optically references its namesake. The Spitfire Perpetual Calendar Digital Date-Month in its red gold case combines tasteful design with the art of watchmaking at its finest. It is the first IWC Pilot’s Watch to show the date and month digitally in the form of four large numerals; in visual terms, it goes perfectly with the instrument appearance and revives the tradition of the Pallweber system, now dating back well over 100 years. The Spitfire Chronographwith its IWC-manufactured 89365 calibre is available in red gold and stainless steel. With its vertically arranged numerals, the date window is an unmistakable sign that the engineers had the shape of an altimeter in mind when they designed it.The metal bracelet supplied with Reference 387804, is fitted with a newly developed fine-adjustment mechanism. Simply pressing the IWC button in the folding clasp lengthens the bracelet; to shorten it, the bracelet is pushed together until it is the correct length. Both the pin buckle and folding clasp are slightly bolder, in order to match the larger case diameter. 

    Classic Pilot’s Watches – slightly modified 

    The Pilot’s Watches made by IWC in the 1930s and 1940s established a legend that lives on in the classic Pilot’s Watches family. The most conspicuous change compared to their predecessors – with the exception of the Big Pilot’s Watch– is the vertical triple date display at “3 o’clock”, whose form underscores the cockpit-style design more emphatically. In 2012, the Big Pilot’s Watchwill appear with its familiar looks as well as the highly efficient IWC-manufactured 51111- calibre movement. Compared with its predeces- sor, the Mark XVI, the Pilot’s Watch Mark XVII is 2 millimetres larger at 41 millimetres. With its new red design features, the dial of the Pilot’s Watch Double Chronographis even more attractive, and thanks to a larger case diameter – now 46 millimetres – it is also significantly more legible. The stainless-steel case of the Pilot’s Watch Chronographhas increased by a mod- erate 1 millimetre to 43 millimetres. The new Pilot’s Watch Worldtimerhas a 24-hour ring that enables the wearer to look at all 24 time zones, including the Universal Time Coordinated (UTC). The city ring shows the names of 23 places around the globe, each of which represents a time zone. The dial shows local time, which can be adjusted forwards or backwards in one-hour steps – also when crossing the International Date Line. “It is with pride and confidence that IWC looks forward to 2012, our year of the Pilot’s Watch. We have six exciting new models, including two Perpetual Calendar models, with some of the most complex watchmaking features imaginable, the new Miramar design line and the new-look Spitfire collection,” sums up Georges Kern. 

    Pilot’s Watches for 76 years 

    The Schaffhausen-based watch manufacturer IWC has been making rugged and reliable timepieces for pilots and their passengers since the mid-1930s. Right from the start, IWC Pilot’s Watches were designed to offer optimum legibility by day and night and established the look of an instrument: a look that has since determined the appearance of this special breed of watches, to this day. The IWC Special Pilot’s Watch, launched in 1936, stood out with a distinctive black dial that was set off by striking luminescent hands and large luminescent numerals. Outstanding technical features of the IWC Special Pilot’s Watch included a shock-protected balance wheel bearing and a non-magnetic escapement. With its 55-millimetre diameter, the Big Pilot’s Watch 52 T. S. C. of 1940 is the biggest wristwatch IWC Schaffhausen has ever manufactured. As a deck watch it featured, among other things, a central hacking seconds to enable pilots and navigators to synchronize their watches with down-to-the-second precision. An extra-long leather strap also meant that it could be fastened around a flight suit. The clearly arranged dial was a perfect example of reductionism: a style cue and a paragon for all classic Pilot’s Watches. The Mark 11, with its hand-wound 89 calibre, manufactured from 1948 onwards for the Royal Air Force, established itself as the best-known IWC Pilot’s Watch of them all. Its movement was enclosed in a soft-iron inner case to shield the mechanism from magnetic fields. The Mark 11 was used success-fully by the Royal Air Force for over 30 years. 

    A tribute to the supermen of the skies 
    Two new Pilot’s Watches: TOP GUN Miramar and TOP GUN


    Heading up the professional Pilot’s Watches from IWC Schaffhausen is the new 2012 TOP GUN collection. And in the vanguard is the new Miramar line: a tribute to the birthplace of the Top Gun legend in California. 

    The pilots who pass out from the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School in Fallon, Nevada, are part of the world’s flying elite. Their insignia: Top Gun. Top Gun is also the name of an IWC watch collection offering the very best in mechanical watchmaking today. And in 2012, five new models will be taking off. Three of them feature the classical TOP GUN design,recognizable from the instrument look of the dial and the attractive mix of materials consisting of ceramic for the case, titanium for the push-buttons and crown, as well as the soft strap material. They are joined by two timepieces in the new TOP GUN Miramar line. The design of the case and dial was inspired by old observer’s watches. The most conspicuous visual features are the shimmering metallic grey of the ceramic case and the rugged green textile strap. 

    The Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN (Ref.501901) combines the clear-cut instrument look of the 1940s with ultra-modern watch technology from the 21st century. Fully wound, the IWC-manufactured 51111-calibre movement consisting of 311 components will keep the movement running for 7 days. And if it is not already clear, the Top Gun insignia on the case back says it all: the Big Pilot’s Watch has entered the age of supersonic flight. The Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar (Ref. 501902) incorporates precisely the same technical features but comes in three colours: matte grey, beige and green: in design terms a first for IWC. 

    The ideal choice for complex airborne manoeuvres is the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN (Ref.388001) with protection against magnetic fields and a glass secured against drops in pressure. And with the IWC-manufactured 89365-calibre movement, it is equally impressive on the inside. With the same specifications, the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar (Ref.388002) features the new design and is equally “airworthy”. 

    No less impressive is the Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar TOP GUN (Ref.502902), with a wealth of complex technological features that include a perpetual calendar with four-digit year display, moon phase display and 7-day power reserve. Working away inside the black ceramic case is one of IWC’s largest and most efficient automatic winding systems. 

    Asking the ultimate of man and machine 

    The Edition TOP GUN has held a permanent place in IWC’s Pilot’s Watch family since 2007. It takes its name from a special training course offered by the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School, the “Strike Fighter Tactics Instructor”, better known by the legendary accolade “Top Gun”. Pilots who successfully complete this course are part of a tiny elite comprising the best trained, fastest reacting and most courageous of their breed. The technology used is state of the art. Within the space of a A tribute to the supermen of the skies Two new Pilot’s Watches: TOP GUN Miramar and TOP GUN few seconds, the jets reach their take-off speed of just under 300 km/h. During training flights above the endless deserts of Nevada, they hurtle through the air at up to twice the speed of sound. 

    As exacting as the demands placed on the young pilots, they are no less stringent than those placed on the equipment. The quality standards required of a watch designed for flying are formidable, and IWC Schaffhausen swears by two materials that it was the first to use in watchmaking worldwide: high-tech ceramic for the case and titanium for the crown and controls. The zirconium oxide case is sintered at 2,000 degrees Celsius and machined with diamond tools. It is also nonmagnetic, acid-resistant, light and, like titanium, very skin-friendly. IWC introduced titanium to watch case-making while working with Porsche Design. Both companies were forerunners in the machining of this high-tech material, which is corrosion-resistant and tougher than steel but weighs only about half as much. 

    During dogfights – air-to-air combat calling for spectacular manoeuvres that any pilot must master – both man and material are subject to enormous g-forces. The cockpit occupant briefly undergoes the equivalent of up to nine times the acceleration of gravity. He is pushed back forcefully into his seat: his body contorts and even his watch presses deeply into his wrist. 

    During regular centrifuge sessions, the pilots have to tolerate 9 g for 15 seconds, which seems like an eternity, without losing consciousness, as their own weight increases to around 600 kilograms. In a similar test with a centrifugal accelerator, IWC Pilot’s Watches have withstood forces of up to 30 g for minutes at a time. So what possible use could that be' Generally speaking, none at all. But when the ejector seat is used, it generates forces of up to 20 g and the Pilot’s Watch designers in Schaffhausen think like the Top Gun instructors in Fallon:it’s better to be safe than sorry. 

    Team spirit and tradition 
    The new TOP GUN Miramar design line 


    Inspired by the spirit of the first Top Gun flight school in Miramar, California, two models in the TOP GUN collection race into 2012: the Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar and the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar. At the same time, both timepieces reference IWC’s longstanding tradition in the manufacture of deck watches. 

    The United States Navy Fighter Weapons School – the official title of the Top Gun flight training programme – was based in Miramar, California, from 1969 to1996. In the eyes of aircraft enthusiasts all over the world, the small town about 30 kilometres north of San Diego, is the origin of the Top Gun legend. 

    And because Top Gun pilots spend so much time in the air, it’s vital that they also keep their feet on the ground. Shared values like camaraderie, team spirit and a sense of tradition are reinforced at barbecues and veteran reunions. But the feeling of belonging common to the elite pilots is best shown by their famous hand-made G1 flight jackets. Authentic signs of wear and tear indicating countless missions, increase the jacket’s sentimental value, while sewn-on patches closely document the pilot’s career: the aircraft types he has flown, clubs and societies, aircraft carriers and successfully completed training courses. Of these, the Top Gun insignia commands the highest respect. Pieces of military clothing such as the flight jacket are considered to be timeless classics and have long had an influence on civilian fashion. 

    The military design and the extensive experience of IWC in the manufacture of so-called deck watches were a source of inspiration to IWC Schaffhausen in its creation of the TOP GUN Miramar line. The desired visual effect is reached by the metallic sheen of the grey ceramic case, the beige of the hands and chapter ring and the green of the textile strap. 

    The historic legacy of the deck watches 

    The chapter ring contains another surprising new feature for IWC’s Pilot’s Watches: the outer numerals indicate the minutes while the hours are shown in a signal red inner circle. The unusual division into an external chapter ring and an inner hour circle is a reference to the deck watches of the 1930 s and 1940 s, and consequently the historic legacy of IWC’s Pilot’s Watches. In order to determine the astronomical position on long-haul flights, it was vital that the minutes and seconds on deck watches could be read off with maximum precision. The enormous importance of precise time for pilots can be seen from the lengths they went to in order to obtain it: prior to take-off, the navigator would set his observer’s watch by a surface chronometer in the flight preparation centre; this was set using a time signal on the radio, which in turn took the time from a central seconds pendulum clock. Once aboard, the navigator passed on the exact time to the captain, who usually wore a chronograph. 

    With its new TOP GUN Miramar line, IWC Schaffhausen addresses watch lovers who consciously celebrate the historical legacy behind the Pilot’s Watches, but do not wish to forgo the technological advances of the 21st century. 

    Every second counts 
    Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN and Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar


    The top pilot’s job is an ongoing struggle against time: when an alert sounds, he has to start working with all the precision of a watch movement and have his jet up in the air within no time. A chronograph with down-to-the-second accuracy is de rigueur in the TOP GUN Pilot’s Watch line. 

    If you plan to stay ahead of the pack, you need state-of-the-art technology. And that’s why the pilots at the NAS base in Fallon in the Nevada desert are trained in the very latest jets – the Top Guns. Any Haute Horlogerie manufacturer planning to remain in the top flight needs to upgrade on a regular basis. IWC Schaffhausen, for instance, has equipped its new Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN (Ref.388001) with the in-house 89365 calibre,which boosts the watch’s power reserve from 44 to a useful 68 hours compared with its predecessor. A soft-iron inner case protects the precision mechanism against magnetic fields. 

    The dial is in the classical cockpit design, all the way down to the date display, which resembles an altimeter. Luminescent white hands and indices guarantee outstanding legibility, even when visibility is far from perfect. The central chronograph hand, whose signal red counte-poise brings to mind the silhouette of a jet, shows recorded times in seconds, while the small white hand in the subdial at “12 o’clock” shows the number of elapsed minutes. Thanks to the integrated flyback function, simply push-ing the reset button causes the stopwatch hand to return to zero and instantly starts recording a new time. The small red hacking seconds rotating at “6 o’clock” indicates that the watch is running normally. It can be stopped whenever necessary for synchronization purposes. 

    The high-tech materials used in the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN are of the very highest quality. The ceramic case, enlarged by 2 millimetres to 46, is water-resistant to 6 bar, light and extremely skin-friendly. The push-buttons and crown are made of titanium. With an anti-reflective coating on both sides, the convex sapphire glass (grade 9 on Mohs’ hardness scale) is highly scratch-resistant and secured against sudden drops in pressure in the cockpit. 

    Heading up IWC’s Pilot’s Watches 

    With identical features, the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar (Ref.388002) references the original home of Top Gun: Miramar in California. The US Navy Fighter Weapons School was situated there from 1969 to 1996, when it was relocated to Fallon in Nevada. The Top Gun engraving on the titanium case back is a tribute to a select elite and an indication that this is the technological highlight of IWC’s Pilot’s Watch family. The Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar features the military design. The ceramic case owes its shimmering metallic grey, which is paired with a dial in matte anthracite, to the elaborately finished surfacing. The hands and chapter ring in beige, together with the rugged green textile strap, reinforce the desired look. 

    One unusual feature is the separate depiction of the minutes on the external ring and the hours on a smaller inner ring. This is derived from an original feature of deck watches in the 1930s and 1940s, when the precise time in minutes and seconds was essential for determining the aircraft’s position. The flyback is another function that dates from that era of aviation. It allows the chronograph to “delete” an ongoing time measurement and to start a new one without an intermediate stop. This was vital if the pilot was timing certain curved radii using his watch, or if a manoeuvre had to be abandoned and a new one started immediately.

  • 2012: the year of the high-flyers 

    The new Pilot’s Watches from IWC Schaffhausen

    IWC Schaffhausen gets off to a powerful start in 2012: the year of the Pilot’s Watch. With five new models, the TOP GUN collection establishes itself as an independent formation within the IWC Pilot’s Watch family. The year’s high-flyer is the TOP GUN Miramar: a tribute to the place in California where the myth of the elite pilots was born. And two Pilot’s Watches featuring many of fine watchmaking’s greatest achievements prepare for take off: the Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar TOP GUN and the Spitfire Perpetual Calendar Digital Date-Month. 

    “For the new TOP GUN Pilot’s Watches we drew on our long tradition of manufacturing unusual deck watches. In the1940s, Pilot’s Watches made in Schaffhausen were widely used as so-called B watches for flight navigation,” explains Georges Kern, CEO of IWC Schaffhausen. “Back then, only wristwatches with the highest possible precision were good enough for navigators: the pilot and his crew would synchronize their watches to the navigator’s.” Since the main priority for navigation is optimum legibility of the seconds and minutes, these two were often the only indicators shown on the outer ring; the hours would be relatively small and appeared on a central ring. This particular detail inspired IWC’s designers to display the hour circle and the chapter ring separately on the dials of the Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar and the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar.“The process of retracing the historic roots of our Pilot’s Watches gave us the idea of using the Miramar tocreateour first linewith a military-style design,” adds Christian Knoop, Creative Director at IWC. “This allows us to combine various styles in an imaginative way – even with luxury elements, if we wish. That’s one of the reasons the new Miramar line is such a perfect fit for IWC: premium-class watches with out- standing mechanics and a rugged, almost hardedged feel.” The dark, metallic sheen of the grey ceramic case and the matte anthracite of the dial all waken associations with precision instruments used in aviation. The use of specific camouflage colours such as beige for the hands and chapter ring, together with green for the strap, underscore the desired look. The textile strap leans visibly on the tough webbing belts. It is complemented by two high-tech materials, typical for TOP GUN, that were introduced to watchmaking by IWC as early as the 1980s: zirconium oxide for the case, along with titanium for the controls and the watch back. Both the Miramar models – like the entire TOP GUN collection, incidentally – are equipped with IWC-manufactured calibres. Like the other Big Pilot’s Watch,theBig Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar is equipped with the largest automatic movement made by IWC, with a power reserve of 168 hours. This also explains the 48-millimetre case diameter. The calibre 89365 found in the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramaris one of the most advanced and robust chronograph movements ever produced. It has a flyback function as well as an analogue display for stopped minutes and seconds. Commenting on the family’s positioning in the international watch market, Karoline Huber, Director Marketing & Communications at IWC, explains: “Flying enthusiasts all over the world think of Miramar in California as the birth place of the Top Gun legend. With our new TOP GUN Miramar design line, we are addressing watch lovers who consciously embrace IWC’s long-standing tradition of manufacturing Pilot’s Watches but who also wish to benefit from the technological advances of the 21st century and the inimitable quality typical of IWC.” 

    Classic TOP GUN collection: black and white with red highlights 

    The TOP GUN edition has held a permanent place in IWC Pilot’s Watches collection since 2007. The elaborately equipped Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar TOP GUNcomes with a host of advanced features, including a perpetual calendar with its four-digit year display, moon phase display and seven-day power reserve. The Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUNunites the clear-cut instrument look of the 1940s with ultra-modern watch technology. The tiny aircraft silhouette on the seconds hand creates an eye-catching signal-red highlight on the black-and-white dial. The Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN, which comes with a flyback function and protection against magnetic fields, is also equipped with an IWC-manufactured movement. 

    Rising fast: the Spitfire combines fabulous contours with first-class mechanics 

    In 2003, IWC Schaffhausen launched a Pilot’s Watch line that took not only its name from the Spitfire but also reflected the elegance and out- standing technology of the legendary single-propeller aircraft. Now, the designers and technicians have subjected the Spitfire watches to a thorough general overhaul. With a streamlined design and new features, they remain firmly on course for success. All the latest models are fitted with IWC-manufactured calibres. The gold and stainless-steel cases are meticulously machined by hand; the result is a vibrant interplay of shiny, silky matte and structured surfaces. The sun-pattern finish gives the slate-coloured dial a metallic sheen that optically references its namesake. The Spitfire Perpetual Calendar Digital Date-Month in its red gold case combines tasteful design with the art of watchmaking at its finest. It is the first IWC Pilot’s Watch to show the date and month digitally in the form of four large numerals; in visual terms, it goes perfectly with the instrument appearance and revives the tradition of the Pallweber system, now dating back well over 100 years. The Spitfire Chronographwith its IWC-manufactured 89365 calibre is available in red gold and stainless steel. With its vertically arranged numerals, the date window is an unmistakable sign that the engineers had the shape of an altimeter in mind when they designed it.The metal bracelet supplied with Reference 387804, is fitted with a newly developed fine-adjustment mechanism. Simply pressing the IWC button in the folding clasp lengthens the bracelet; to shorten it, the bracelet is pushed together until it is the correct length. Both the pin buckle and folding clasp are slightly bolder, in order to match the larger case diameter. 

    Classic Pilot’s Watches – slightly modified 

    The Pilot’s Watches made by IWC in the 1930s and 1940s established a legend that lives on in the classic Pilot’s Watches family. The most conspicuous change compared to their predecessors – with the exception of the Big Pilot’s Watch– is the vertical triple date display at “3 o’clock”, whose form underscores the cockpit-style design more emphatically. In 2012, the Big Pilot’s Watchwill appear with its familiar looks as well as the highly efficient IWC-manufactured 51111- calibre movement. Compared with its predeces- sor, the Mark XVI, the Pilot’s Watch Mark XVII is 2 millimetres larger at 41 millimetres. With its new red design features, the dial of the Pilot’s Watch Double Chronographis even more attractive, and thanks to a larger case diameter – now 46 millimetres – it is also significantly more legible. The stainless-steel case of the Pilot’s Watch Chronographhas increased by a mod- erate 1 millimetre to 43 millimetres. The new Pilot’s Watch Worldtimerhas a 24-hour ring that enables the wearer to look at all 24 time zones, including the Universal Time Coordinated (UTC). The city ring shows the names of 23 places around the globe, each of which represents a time zone. The dial shows local time, which can be adjusted forwards or backwards in one-hour steps – also when crossing the International Date Line. “It is with pride and confidence that IWC looks forward to 2012, our year of the Pilot’s Watch. We have six exciting new models, including two Perpetual Calendar models, with some of the most complex watchmaking features imaginable, the new Miramar design line and the new-look Spitfire collection,” sums up Georges Kern. 

    Pilot’s Watches for 76 years 

    The Schaffhausen-based watch manufacturer IWC has been making rugged and reliable timepieces for pilots and their passengers since the mid-1930s. Right from the start, IWC Pilot’s Watches were designed to offer optimum legibility by day and night and established the look of an instrument: a look that has since determined the appearance of this special breed of watches, to this day. The IWC Special Pilot’s Watch, launched in 1936, stood out with a distinctive black dial that was set off by striking luminescent hands and large luminescent numerals. Outstanding technical features of the IWC Special Pilot’s Watch included a shock-protected balance wheel bearing and a non-magnetic escapement. With its 55-millimetre diameter, the Big Pilot’s Watch 52 T. S. C. of 1940 is the biggest wristwatch IWC Schaffhausen has ever manufactured. As a deck watch it featured, among other things, a central hacking seconds to enable pilots and navigators to synchronize their watches with down-to-the-second precision. An extra-long leather strap also meant that it could be fastened around a flight suit. The clearly arranged dial was a perfect example of reductionism: a style cue and a paragon for all classic Pilot’s Watches. The Mark 11, with its hand-wound 89 calibre, manufactured from 1948 onwards for the Royal Air Force, established itself as the best-known IWC Pilot’s Watch of them all. Its movement was enclosed in a soft-iron inner case to shield the mechanism from magnetic fields. The Mark 11 was used success-fully by the Royal Air Force for over 30 years. 

    A tribute to the supermen of the skies 
    Two new Pilot’s Watches: TOP GUN Miramar and TOP GUN


    Heading up the professional Pilot’s Watches from IWC Schaffhausen is the new 2012 TOP GUN collection. And in the vanguard is the new Miramar line: a tribute to the birthplace of the Top Gun legend in California. 

    The pilots who pass out from the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School in Fallon, Nevada, are part of the world’s flying elite. Their insignia: Top Gun. Top Gun is also the name of an IWC watch collection offering the very best in mechanical watchmaking today. And in 2012, five new models will be taking off. Three of them feature the classical TOP GUN design,recognizable from the instrument look of the dial and the attractive mix of materials consisting of ceramic for the case, titanium for the push-buttons and crown, as well as the soft strap material. They are joined by two timepieces in the new TOP GUN Miramar line. The design of the case and dial was inspired by old observer’s watches. The most conspicuous visual features are the shimmering metallic grey of the ceramic case and the rugged green textile strap. 

    The Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN (Ref.501901) combines the clear-cut instrument look of the 1940s with ultra-modern watch technology from the 21st century. Fully wound, the IWC-manufactured 51111-calibre movement consisting of 311 components will keep the movement running for 7 days. And if it is not already clear, the Top Gun insignia on the case back says it all: the Big Pilot’s Watch has entered the age of supersonic flight. The Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar (Ref. 501902) incorporates precisely the same technical features but comes in three colours: matte grey, beige and green: in design terms a first for IWC. 

    The ideal choice for complex airborne manoeuvres is the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN (Ref.388001) with protection against magnetic fields and a glass secured against drops in pressure. And with the IWC-manufactured 89365-calibre movement, it is equally impressive on the inside. With the same specifications, the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar (Ref.388002) features the new design and is equally “airworthy”. 

    No less impressive is the Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar TOP GUN (Ref.502902), with a wealth of complex technological features that include a perpetual calendar with four-digit year display, moon phase display and 7-day power reserve. Working away inside the black ceramic case is one of IWC’s largest and most efficient automatic winding systems. 

    Asking the ultimate of man and machine 

    The Edition TOP GUN has held a permanent place in IWC’s Pilot’s Watch family since 2007. It takes its name from a special training course offered by the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School, the “Strike Fighter Tactics Instructor”, better known by the legendary accolade “Top Gun”. Pilots who successfully complete this course are part of a tiny elite comprising the best trained, fastest reacting and most courageous of their breed. The technology used is state of the art. Within the space of a A tribute to the supermen of the skies Two new Pilot’s Watches: TOP GUN Miramar and TOP GUN few seconds, the jets reach their take-off speed of just under 300 km/h. During training flights above the endless deserts of Nevada, they hurtle through the air at up to twice the speed of sound. 

    As exacting as the demands placed on the young pilots, they are no less stringent than those placed on the equipment. The quality standards required of a watch designed for flying are formidable, and IWC Schaffhausen swears by two materials that it was the first to use in watchmaking worldwide: high-tech ceramic for the case and titanium for the crown and controls. The zirconium oxide case is sintered at 2,000 degrees Celsius and machined with diamond tools. It is also nonmagnetic, acid-resistant, light and, like titanium, very skin-friendly. IWC introduced titanium to watch case-making while working with Porsche Design. Both companies were forerunners in the machining of this high-tech material, which is corrosion-resistant and tougher than steel but weighs only about half as much. 

    During dogfights – air-to-air combat calling for spectacular manoeuvres that any pilot must master – both man and material are subject to enormous g-forces. The cockpit occupant briefly undergoes the equivalent of up to nine times the acceleration of gravity. He is pushed back forcefully into his seat: his body contorts and even his watch presses deeply into his wrist. 

    During regular centrifuge sessions, the pilots have to tolerate 9 g for 15 seconds, which seems like an eternity, without losing consciousness, as their own weight increases to around 600 kilograms. In a similar test with a centrifugal accelerator, IWC Pilot’s Watches have withstood forces of up to 30 g for minutes at a time. So what possible use could that be' Generally speaking, none at all. But when the ejector seat is used, it generates forces of up to 20 g and the Pilot’s Watch designers in Schaffhausen think like the Top Gun instructors in Fallon:it’s better to be safe than sorry. 

    Team spirit and tradition 
    The new TOP GUN Miramar design line 


    Inspired by the spirit of the first Top Gun flight school in Miramar, California, two models in the TOP GUN collection race into 2012: the Big Pilot’s Watch TOP GUN Miramar and the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar. At the same time, both timepieces reference IWC’s longstanding tradition in the manufacture of deck watches. 

    The United States Navy Fighter Weapons School – the official title of the Top Gun flight training programme – was based in Miramar, California, from 1969 to1996. In the eyes of aircraft enthusiasts all over the world, the small town about 30 kilometres north of San Diego, is the origin of the Top Gun legend. 

    And because Top Gun pilots spend so much time in the air, it’s vital that they also keep their feet on the ground. Shared values like camaraderie, team spirit and a sense of tradition are reinforced at barbecues and veteran reunions. But the feeling of belonging common to the elite pilots is best shown by their famous hand-made G1 flight jackets. Authentic signs of wear and tear indicating countless missions, increase the jacket’s sentimental value, while sewn-on patches closely document the pilot’s career: the aircraft types he has flown, clubs and societies, aircraft carriers and successfully completed training courses. Of these, the Top Gun insignia commands the highest respect. Pieces of military clothing such as the flight jacket are considered to be timeless classics and have long had an influence on civilian fashion. 

    The military design and the extensive experience of IWC in the manufacture of so-called deck watches were a source of inspiration to IWC Schaffhausen in its creation of the TOP GUN Miramar line. The desired visual effect is reached by the metallic sheen of the grey ceramic case, the beige of the hands and chapter ring and the green of the textile strap. 

    The historic legacy of the deck watches 

    The chapter ring contains another surprising new feature for IWC’s Pilot’s Watches: the outer numerals indicate the minutes while the hours are shown in a signal red inner circle. The unusual division into an external chapter ring and an inner hour circle is a reference to the deck watches of the 1930 s and 1940 s, and consequently the historic legacy of IWC’s Pilot’s Watches. In order to determine the astronomical position on long-haul flights, it was vital that the minutes and seconds on deck watches could be read off with maximum precision. The enormous importance of precise time for pilots can be seen from the lengths they went to in order to obtain it: prior to take-off, the navigator would set his observer’s watch by a surface chronometer in the flight preparation centre; this was set using a time signal on the radio, which in turn took the time from a central seconds pendulum clock. Once aboard, the navigator passed on the exact time to the captain, who usually wore a chronograph. 

    With its new TOP GUN Miramar line, IWC Schaffhausen addresses watch lovers who consciously celebrate the historical legacy behind the Pilot’s Watches, but do not wish to forgo the technological advances of the 21st century. 

    Every second counts 
    Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN and Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar


    The top pilot’s job is an ongoing struggle against time: when an alert sounds, he has to start working with all the precision of a watch movement and have his jet up in the air within no time. A chronograph with down-to-the-second accuracy is de rigueur in the TOP GUN Pilot’s Watch line. 

    If you plan to stay ahead of the pack, you need state-of-the-art technology. And that’s why the pilots at the NAS base in Fallon in the Nevada desert are trained in the very latest jets – the Top Guns. Any Haute Horlogerie manufacturer planning to remain in the top flight needs to upgrade on a regular basis. IWC Schaffhausen, for instance, has equipped its new Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN (Ref.388001) with the in-house 89365 calibre,which boosts the watch’s power reserve from 44 to a useful 68 hours compared with its predecessor. A soft-iron inner case protects the precision mechanism against magnetic fields. 

    The dial is in the classical cockpit design, all the way down to the date display, which resembles an altimeter. Luminescent white hands and indices guarantee outstanding legibility, even when visibility is far from perfect. The central chronograph hand, whose signal red counte-poise brings to mind the silhouette of a jet, shows recorded times in seconds, while the small white hand in the subdial at “12 o’clock” shows the number of elapsed minutes. Thanks to the integrated flyback function, simply push-ing the reset button causes the stopwatch hand to return to zero and instantly starts recording a new time. The small red hacking seconds rotating at “6 o’clock” indicates that the watch is running normally. It can be stopped whenever necessary for synchronization purposes. 

    The high-tech materials used in the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN are of the very highest quality. The ceramic case, enlarged by 2 millimetres to 46, is water-resistant to 6 bar, light and extremely skin-friendly. The push-buttons and crown are made of titanium. With an anti-reflective coating on both sides, the convex sapphire glass (grade 9 on Mohs’ hardness scale) is highly scratch-resistant and secured against sudden drops in pressure in the cockpit. 

    Heading up IWC’s Pilot’s Watches 

    With identical features, the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar (Ref.388002) references the original home of Top Gun: Miramar in California. The US Navy Fighter Weapons School was situated there from 1969 to 1996, when it was relocated to Fallon in Nevada. The Top Gun engraving on the titanium case back is a tribute to a select elite and an indication that this is the technological highlight of IWC’s Pilot’s Watch family. The Pilot’s Watch Chronograph TOP GUN Miramar features the military design. The ceramic case owes its shimmering metallic grey, which is paired with a dial in matte anthracite, to the elaborately finished surfacing. The hands and chapter ring in beige, together with the rugged green textile strap, reinforce the desired look. 

    One unusual feature is the separate depiction of the minutes on the external ring and the hours on a smaller inner ring. This is derived from an original feature of deck watches in the 1930s and 1940s, when the precise time in minutes and seconds was essential for determining the aircraft’s position. The flyback is another function that dates from that era of aviation. It allows the chronograph to “delete” an ongoing time measurement and to start a new one without an intermediate stop. This was vital if the pilot was timing certain curved radii using his watch, or if a manoeuvre had to be abandoned and a new one started immediately.

  • Brand  : IWC
    Collection  : Pilot's Watches
    Model  : Montre d'Aviateur Chronographe TOP GUN
    Reference  : IW388001
    Complement : Black Ceramic - Black Fabric Strap
    Year : 2012
    Is not commercialised any more
    List Price : 11 900 €
    Diameter : 46 mm
    Thickness : 16.50 mm
    Styles : Sporty
    Types : Self-winding
    Calibre : 89365
    Complication : Flyback Chronograph
    Small Seconds
    60-Minute Counter
    Stop second mechanism
    Case material : Black ceramic
    Case peculiarity : Screwed-down crown
    Anti-magnetic
    Water-resistance : 60 meters
    Dial color : Black
    Display : Luminescent hands
    Indexes : Luminescent
    Arabic numerals
    Triangles
    Baton-type
    Glass : Domed
    Sapphire
    Antireflective coating
    Strap material : Toile
    Strap color : Black
    Strap clasp : Folding buckle
    More characteristics : Movement
    Jewels : 35
    Frequency : 4 Hz
    28.800 A/h
    Power reserve : 68 hours

    Dial
    Soft-iron inner case for protection against magnetic fields
    Glass secured against displacement by drop in air pressure

    Folding clasp in stainless steel 

    Glass Antireflective coating on both sides