Wearables

Pierre DeRoche TNT Royal Rétro 43 shows that six second hands are better than one

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The TNT Royal Rétro 43 has six second hands instead of one
The TNT Royal Rétro 43 comes in a limited run of 201 units
The TNT Royal Rétro 43 has six second hands instead of one
The TNT Royal Rétro 43 measures 43 mm thick
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How can an upmarket analog watch compete in a digital world? Pierre DeRoche’s answer is its TNT Royal Rétro 43, which is based on the idea that if one second hand is good, six is better. Instead of one hand taking the tiresome journey around the entire dial, the TNT Royal Retro 43 has six; each measuring a 10-second interval before passing the job off to the next in a neat bit of mechanical choreography.

The TNT Royal Rétro 43 revives the Royal Rétro movement, which was created five years ago and is billed as "the essence of Pierre DeRoche." In this case, the movement has been tweaked to bring down the size a bit, so the watch is 4 mm smaller than its predecessor.

The watch boasts a mechanical 25-jewel automatic movement and an engraved oscillating weight. The half-dozen second hands are held up by six chamfered and satin-finished seconds bridges. Each second hand has its own retrograde gear train and a strip-spring return to snap it back to zero after it's done its task.

The TNT Royal Rétro 43 comes in a limited run of 201 units

This is all set in a 43-mm titanium case with black PVD treatment, sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating on both sides, a sapphire back, and an alligator leather strap. The whole thing is water-resistant to 100 m (328 ft).

The TNT Royal Rétro 43 comes in a limited edition of 201 units and costs US$25,000.

The video below shows the Royal Rétro movement in action.

Source: Pierre DeRoche

View gallery - 3 images
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11 comments
Slowburn
Why? Just Why?
xdigitor
Slowburn, Why not?
The Skud
RIGHT ON, SLOWBURN! Looks as if the Accounting Department found a lost inventory of widgets on a back shelf and gave a designer the task of finding a way of using them up. A huge amount of complexity for no actual timekeeping benefit. To have a unique timepiece should not equal difficulty of reading the thing once you are wearing it - Or is the object just to buy them and keep them in a safe somewhere?
Slowburn
@ xdigitor It makes the watch harder to read, less reliable, and more expensive without adding any improvement in accuracy.
Mel Tisdale
As Slowburn so eloquently puts it: "Why? Just Why?"
My watch cost 40 złoty - about £8.00. It keeps excellent time and if I lose it, or it eventually gives up the ghost, I will put its replacement on instead (which I have already bought). On top of all that, the dial is infinitely more easily read than the one on this watch.
I cannot imagine wearing a US$25,000 item on my wrist. There are a number of people out there who would not value my wrist as being anywhere near as valuable and remove it, together with the watch, rather than fiddle with the strap.
Dan Lewis
No matter it's cost, it's still insanity. All those impacts of all those little arms returning to position over the years. No, I don't like the design.
I'm still a cave-being, loving Citizen's Eco-Drive design.
Foofaraw
I disagree with fellow posters. I see a work of art. If they were $24,950.00 less expensive I would most definitely purchase---too bad, over my budget.
Gabriel Jones
It is a nice looking watch, but being the type of person that doesn't have $25,000 to spend on anything, let alone a watch, I can think of a lot of things I'd rather pay money for.
Slowburn
I wish somebody would reintroduce a cheap, self winding, waterproof, balance wheel watch. Say 1950s technology.
rocketride
@ Slowburn For the same reason a dog licks his balls. . . because he can.