Piaget Altiplano Chronograph: Ultra-thin a true complication

Piaget Altiplano Chronograph. Introduced in 2015. It houses the Piaget Calibre 883P manual-winding movement that is 4.65mm thick with 50 hours of power reserve and comes in a 41mm diameter 18K pink gold case that is 8.24mm thick. The Piaget Altiplano Chronograph features the flyback chronograph and a second time zone display. At the time of its launch in January 2015, Piaget laid its claim as having the world’s thinnest chronograph flyback movement and chronograph flyback watch. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. 2015 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie. Special thanks to Angela Tea

Piaget Altiplano Chronograph. Introduced in 2015. It houses the Piaget Calibre 883P manual-winding movement that is 4.65mm thick with 50 hours of power reserve and comes in a 41mm diameter 18K pink gold case that is 8.24mm thick. The Piaget Altiplano Chronograph features the flyback chronograph and a second time zone display. At the time of its launch in January 2015, Piaget laid its claim as having the world’s thinnest chronograph flyback movement and chronograph flyback watch. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. 2015 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie. Special thanks to Angela Tea


Piaget’s Altiplano Chronograph is sleek and slim. Presented at the 25th Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie held in Geneva in 2015, it houses the new Piaget Calibre 883P flyback chronograph movement that is just 4.65 thick. What’s more, its case is 8.24mm thick.

This is an extremely slim movement and likewise, for its case. This explains why Piaget is laying its claim to not one but two world records, what the brand states as “the double slimness” records for the thinnest flyback chronograph movement and the thinnest flyback chronograph watch.

It required two years of development time to create the Calibre 883P column wheel flyback chronograph movement.

What’s more, this ultra-thin flyback chronograph wristwatch also features the second time zone, indicated on the sub-dial at the nine o’clock position.

The Piaget Altiplano Chronograph is powered by the Calibre 883P manual-winding movement that is 4.65mm thick. With this, Piaget lays its claim to having the world’s thinnest chronograph flyback movement. Housed in a case that is 8.24mm thick, Piaget’s second record for this watch is the world’s thinnest chronograph flyback watch. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. 2015 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie

The Piaget Altiplano Chronograph is powered by the Calibre 883P manual-winding movement that is 4.65mm thick. With this, Piaget lays its claim to having the world’s thinnest chronograph flyback movement. Housed in a case that is 8.24mm thick, Piaget’s second record for this watch is the world’s thinnest chronograph flyback watch. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. 2015 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie

“We are expressing our true philosophy in watchmaking. The ultra-thin [movement] is a true Piaget complication. By reducing every component to the bare minimum, such ultra-thin movements have allowed us to break 14 records.

“Today, we have a full range of 37 calibres. Out of the 37, a total of 25 are among the thinnest in their category,” says Franck Touzeau, international watch marketing and creation director, Piaget.

Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award: The Beagle has landed

Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award. Using ultra-violet light to demonstrate the luminescence on the dial (this explains the “blueness”. Do note that the SuperLuminova is actually in green in darkness.) Not only are the hour, minute and seconds hands luminescent once “charged”, so are the hour markers including the sleeping Snoopy. This cute feature adds much character to the dial. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. BaselWorld 2015

Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award. Using ultra-violet light to demonstrate the luminescence on the dial (this explains the “blueness”. Do note that the SuperLuminova is actually in green in darkness.) Not only are the hour, minute and seconds hands luminescent once “charged”, so are the hour markers including the sleeping Snoopy. This cute feature adds much character to the dial. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. BaselWorld 2015

One of the more memorable highlights of the 2014 BaselWorld watch fair for us was Omega’s Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award paying tribute to NASA’s Apollo 13 Space Mission.

This new Speedmaster “Snoopy” watch is very different from the 2003 Omega Speedmaster Snoopy Award (which also pays tribute to the Apollo 13 mission). First of all, it has a white dial and features the lovable beagle Snoopy from the “Peanuts” comic strip created by Charles Monroe Schultz (1922 to 2000).

The black-and-white Snoopy is sleeping, lying on its front with eyes closed with the thought bubble caption: “Failure is not an option.”

The phrase in the thought bubble is from one of the lines of the 1995 “Apollo 13” movie whereby Hollywood actor Ed Harris who plays Apollo 13 flight director Gene Kranz mentions: “We’ve never lost an American in Space, we’re sure as hell not gonna lose one on my watch. Failure is not an option!”

This is very much unlike the Omega 2003 Speedmaster Snoopy Award version with a black dial where the more lively Snoopy is in colour (mainly in blue with a red scarf and red armbands) and appears to be performing what we term “the dance of joy” in a spacesuit with the caption “Eyes on the Stars”.

The 42mm Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award houses the Calibre 1861 manual-winding movement. The bezel is in black ceramic and the watch is water-resistant to 50m (5 bar). Unlike the 2003 Omega Speedmaster Snoopy Award which was limited to 5,441 pieces, the 2015 Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award is limited to 1,970 pieces. Priced at around SGD9,500 / US$7,000 / EUR6,500 / MYR28,000. Prices are estimates and are correct as at the time of writing. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. BaselWorld 2015

The 42mm Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award houses the Calibre 1861 manual-winding movement. The bezel is in black ceramic and the watch is water-resistant to 50m (5 bar). Unlike the 2003 Omega Speedmaster Snoopy Award which was limited to 5,441 pieces, the 2015 Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award is limited to 1,970 pieces. Priced at around SGD9,500 / US$7,000 / EUR6,500 / MYR28,000. Prices are estimates and are correct as at the time of writing. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. BaselWorld 2015

However, Snoopy comes alive once the case back is viewed in Omega’s 2015 Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award. The dancing Snoopy astronaut seen on the continuous sweep seconds sub-dial of the 2003 Speedmaster is on the rear of the 2015 version. This time, Snoopy is in 925 silver on a silver plate coated with dark blue enamel and “925 silver pallions” that represent the stars.

The Silver Snoopy Award is actually what Omega received from NASA in 1970. This is because the Omega Speedmaster was the on-board back-up timing device for the crew of Apollo 13 which thankfully, managed to return safely back to Earth despite the dangerous life-threatening situation due to the damage suffered from an explosion that ruptured their fuel cell system.

What is worth noting is that owners of this 2015 Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award won’t lose sight of Snoopy easily as this world-famous beagle has luminescence, a feature we just adore.

At the edge of the dial between one and three o’clock is the inscribed question: “What could you do in 14 seconds?”

This is the reference to the crucial 14-second mid-course correction taken by John Swigert, the command module pilot of Apollo 13. It was a much-needed manual engine burn, timed by Swigert’s Omega Speedmaster, that would place them in a free return trajectory using the Moon’s gravity to help “throw” the spacecraft back towards Earth thereby avoiding a long engine burn. [Source: Spaceflight by Giles Sparrow.]

It also explains why this question is spread over the first 14 seconds or minute boxes between one and three o’clock on the white dial.

On the case back of the Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award: a 925 silver medallion resembling the pin that came with the Silver Snoopy Award that was presented by NASA to Omega in 1970. The plate on which the silver Snoopy is mounted is coated with dark blue enamel. Silver powder was sprinkled by hand over the enamel. The silver Snoopy medallion is protected by sapphire crystal. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. BaselWorld 2015

On the case back of the Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award: a 925 silver medallion resembling the pin that came with the Silver Snoopy Award that was presented by NASA to Omega in 1970. The plate on which the silver Snoopy is mounted is coated with dark blue enamel. Silver powder was sprinkled by hand over the enamel. The silver Snoopy medallion is protected by sapphire crystal. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. BaselWorld 2015

What is obviously common between the 2003 Speedmaster Snoopy Award and the 2015 Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award is the relative simplicity of the Speedmaster Snoopy dials. This is what we believe is in line with Schulz’s comic strips. As highlighted by Brian Walker in “The Comics: The Complete Collection”, Schulz was “a master of minimalism”.

For watch collectors who are also fans of “Peanuts”, especially the lovable Snoopy character, Omega’s 2015 Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award, is one timepiece worth serious consideration as a collectible.

The Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award we saw at BaselWorld and a page from the comic book “The Snoopy Festival” by Charles M. Schulz printed in around 1974. Happy Easter!. Photo: © TANG Portfolio

The Omega Speedmaster Apollo 13 Silver Snoopy Award we saw at BaselWorld and a page from the comic book “The Snoopy Festival” by Charles M. Schulz printed in around 1974. Happy Easter!. Photo: © TANG Portfolio