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TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder, the most accurate mechanical chronograph of all time

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The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder
The TAG-Heuer timer progression
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder with an earlier face design.
The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder escapement. No it doesn't make it any clearer.
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We have commented before at Gizmag on how the luxury watch business can seem to the uninitiated to be an ever-spiraling vortex of pointlessness. Take the latest creation from TAG Heuer. A mechanical watch/chronograph that can time events to 1/2000th of a second. But why? Human reaction time makes it useless and crystal/electronic timers can provide even greater accuracy. For the “haute horologist” the achievement is its own reward, but there are practical spin-offs; TAG-Heuer has essentially re-invented the mechanism that’s been at the very core of mechanical watches for over 300 years.

The regulation of a conventional mechanical watch is performed by a balance wheel and a spiral-shaped torsion hairspring, a system invented by Christian Huygens in 1675. Over the centuries, every aspect of this regulating system has been modified and improved, but not essentially changed.

The Huygens system, although very reliable and it has to be said, aesthetically beautiful, has its limits: accuracy, sensitivity to gravity and thermal expansion, and the virtual impossibility of ever reaching a frequency higher than 500 Hz.

Accurate to an unprecedented 5/10,000 or 1/2,000th of a second, the Mikrogirder is a completely new regulator system - a coupling beam/girder and excitatory beam/girder system working with a linear oscillator (versus a spiral shape in a classical hairspring) that vibrates at a very small angle, as opposed to a traditional watch, which vibrates at an angle of up to 320 degrees.

The TAG-Heuer Mikrogirder escapement. No it doesn't make it any clearer.

The advantages are numerous. In a classic spiral hairspring system, the effect of gravity due to mass is a dominant issue. With the Mikrogirder, the problem no longer exists. There is no loss of amplitude and the movement’s frequency can be modulated without overburdening the power supply. The result is a significant increase in precision (division of time) and performance (frequency accuracy and stability). The Mikrogirder energy performance will apparently enable future TAG Heuer chronographs to attain ultra-high frequencies never before possible. Ten patents are pending.

The statistics are interesting: 1,000 Hz = 1/2000 th = 5/10,000th of a second = 7,200,000 beats per hour. In comparison, a regular watch functions at 4 Hz, or only 28,800 beats per hour. The Mikrogirder is 250 times faster.

The Mikrogirder dual frequency system uses two independent chains to allow the watch to function normally with a reasonable power reserve and automatic winding. When using the chronograph however the second hand spins like a crazy thing and you only get about 4 minutes of operation before you need to manually rewind (you can see it operating in the launch video below).

This obsession with mechanical accuracy may seem strange but it makes perfect sense for TAG Heuer in terms of history and brand. It has famously been involved in the timing of sports events such as the Olympics and Formula One for many years and they are simply following a tradition of constant mechanical development.

For the moment, you can’t actually buy this watch; it’s a testbed and showcase for the brand and probably cost a ridiculous amount of money to create. Undoubtedly the technology will filter down to high-street TAG Heuer watches in due course.

Source: TAG-Heuer

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8 comments
Peter Green
"can seem to the uninitiated to be an ever-spiraling vortex of pointlessness"
Just like, say, Formula 1 is pointless, why does Mercedes need that car, one can't even drive it to work.. :)
Gotcha
Perfect gift for the hyperactive overachiever.
sascha.kremers
@peter: at least some humans can manually operate F1 cars at their physical limits.
But no human can operate this watch precisely enough to justify this accuracy (or a tenth of the accuracy, while we're at it). Yes it's a masterpiece of engineering, but in hand-operated wristwatch just pointless.
Sambath Pech
Impractical as everyone has said, but really cool nontheless just to have (if you don't know what to do with your money). Just as there are people buying the Bugatti Veyron that can top out at 240mph (impractical on street roads), there are folks out there who will want the best of the best when it comes to watches.
gigawatt6
The Rolex 3135 movement beats at 28800bph, which translates into 8 beats per second, not 4 per second - so there should be eight mini-ticks per second. A quite common rate, though by no means universal.
Wombat56
I'd have thought accuracy should be measured as a percentage, or as seconds per year or something. I'm none the wiser what the long term accuracy of this is, or how it compares with existing methods.
John Hagen-Brenner
If I had one of those, I'd just end up pranging it against a table saw or dunking my arm up to the elbow in a bucket of water while wearing it. That's why I NEVER pay more than $25 for a watch.
Bounty Hunter
I have no idea of how these time pieces will be made, but I once owned a Rolex timepiece and though it wasn't as accurate as I had expected, I was always enthralled by the image in my mind of some highly skilled artisan creating my personal timepiece instead of some machine. If this new watch will have the work of an artisan's hand, then its accuracy is made even more marvelous. If, however, the mechanism of the timepiece is computer machined then we have a much less valuable timepiece in my opinion. Soul is what makes art.