
It's complicated
In the world of haute horlogerie (high watchmaking), there's a title to whichmany watchmakers would love to lay claim: The most complicated watch.Previously, that title belonged to the 2010 Franck Muller Aeternitas Mega 4, a wristwatch boasting a massive 36 complications, the name given to watch functions.
The title is slow to claim because these timepieces are sointricate. The Aeternitas Mega 4 took 5 years of painstaking craft,designing and assembling the watch by hand. But Swiss luxurymanufacture Vacheron Constantin has taken the lead.
The newly unveiled Vacheron Constantin Reference 57260 pocket watch took a massive 8 years to complete, designed and assembled by hand by 3 master watchmakers, andit's a glorious masterpiece. At 57 complications, and over 2,800 components, it'sthe most complicated mechanical watch the world has ever seen.
Style at large
It's not actually a watch you would want, or evennecessarily be able to fit in your pocket.
The Reference 57260 is by necessity a chunkybeast. It measures 98 millimetres (3.85 inches) in diameter and is 50.55millimetres (2 inches) thick, about the diameter of a hockey puck, but twice as thick.
It comes in at a massive 960 grams (2.11 lb), which would definitely ruin the lines of your waistcoat.
Its case is white gold, with enamel dials accented withyellow gold on both sides, the movements inside containing 242 jewels. It runsat a frequency of 2.5Hz (18,000 vibrations per hour), with a 60-hour powerreserve.
Stamp of approval
The Reference 57260 boasts the prestigious Hallmark of Geneva certification, reserved for the finest timepieces. Created in 1886 toprotect Swiss watchmakers from "pretenders" to Swiss watchmakingexcellence, the seal is awarded at the Geneva School of Watchmaking, where ateam of inspectors will test all aspects of the watch for functionalperfection. Its stamp, the Geneva coat of arms, on a timepiece means the watch has been entirely assembled,timed and cased in Geneva, and meets the hallmark's rigorous standards in bothmaterials and construction.
Start counting
The 57 complications have been divided into 10 families. Thefirst of these is families related to the telling of time, in which the watchhas six complications. It's possible Vacheron Constantin has been a littlecheeky about what it classifies as a "complication."
A tourbillon,for instance, the part of a watch designed to counter the effects of gravity onthe watch's movement, is generally not considered a function, but a feature.
Forsimplicity's sake, we'll follow the manufacture's list.
Taking time
The six time-telling functions are:
You spin me round
A closer look at the three-axis tourbillon, displayedproudly on the back of the watch, with a jewel bearing in the centre. Jewelbearings, usually made of synthetic ruby, are used in mechanical watchesbecause they are highly accurate, lightweight and low friction, which isimportant with the intricate workings of a timepiece.
Usually tourbillons rotate on a single axis. The three-axistourbillon eliminates gravitational errors in all positions, which in turnmakes the watch more accurate.
The tourbillon is contained within a lightweightaluminium cage, which incorporates the Vacheron Constantin Maltese Cross logo.The cross appears in its entirety every 15 seconds.
Maintaining balance
That's one sexy balance spring. In most watches, the balance spring, which regulates the component that controls the speed of the hands (you can see a video of this here), is a flat coil. In the Reference 57260, space isn't really as much of concern, so Vacheron Constantin has made the balance spring a sphere.
This, the company says, helps eliminate variations caused by the discharge in the balance spring.
When a watch with a flat coil balance spring is fully wound, the balance wheel oscillates with a stronger swing. As the power reserve runs down, the oscillations grow weaker as the distance the balance wheel travels grows shorter. The spherical balance spring, which is also harder to make, produces the most even oscillations as the watch winds down.
It's a date
The second family of complications is perpetual calendarfunctions. The Reference 57260 has 7 of these.
Technical genius
In addition to the Gregorian calendar, the Reference 57260also contains a family of complications related to a perpetual Hebrew calendar,the very first timepiece to do so.
The Hebrew calendar operates over a 19-yearcycle, which works out almost exactly to be a multiple of the solar year andlunar month. 19 solar years equals almost exactly 235 lunar months. This iscalled the Metonic cycle,and the reason it has never been included in a timepiece before is because it'svery difficult to calculate and incorporate into the watch movement. Itsinclusion in the Reference 57260 is a feat of technical genius.
The Hebrew calendar
There are eight complications relating to the perpetualHebrew calendar.
Watching the stars
Astronomical functions are a little more commonplace ingrand complications. The Reference 57260 has 9.
Phases of the moon
The lunar calendar, in the middle of the dial at 12 o'clock,is precisely calculated to display the phase of the moon to a cycle of 29.5306667days. The moon's actual cycle is a tiny fraction shorter at 29.5305882 days, whichmeans that, every 1,027 years and 108 days, the Reference 57260 needs to make amoon phase cycle correction of one day.
Yom Kippur
The most sacred day in the Hebrew calendar is Yom Kippur,the Day of Atonement. It falls on the 10th day of the 7th month.The Reference 57260 calculates and displays the date of Yom Kippur with aretrograde hand at 6 o'clock on the front dial.
Chronograph functions
The front dial has a number of retrograde displays thatperform chronograph functions and can be used simultaneously.
Don't be alarmed
There are seven alarm functions integrated into theReference 57260.
Sounds of Westminster
The Westminster Carillon has a range of functions untoitself.
Wound up
The remaining six complications fall under miscellaneous watchfunctions

