BREITLING. A VERY FINE STAINLESS STEEL PILOT'S CHRONOGRAPH WRISTWATCH

SIGNED BREITLING, GENEVE, NAVITIMER, REF. 806, CASE NO. 1162310, CIRCA 1964

Details
BREITLING. A VERY FINE STAINLESS STEEL PILOT'S CHRONOGRAPH WRISTWATCH
SIGNED BREITLING, GENEVE, NAVITIMER, REF. 806, CASE NO. 1162310, CIRCA 1964
Movement: Manual, cal. Venus 178, 17 jewels, signed
Dial: Black, luminous baton and Arabic 12 numerals, luminous hands, two outer tachometre scales for miles per hour and kilometers, three silvered sunken engine-turned subsidiary dials for 12 hour and 30 minute registers and constant seconds, signed
Case: Stainless steel, bezel with inner revolving slide-rule bezel on silvered chapter ring, two round chronograph buttons in the band, snap on back, 40 mm. diam.


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Lot Essay

Based on the success of the "Chronomat", Breitling and the AOPA (Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association) decided to develop a revolutionary watch featuring a chronograph and navigation tool, the slide rule, allowing pilots and navigators the easy calculation of remaining distances, fuel consumption etc. The name was a combination of the words Navigation & Timer and the model was available as of 1954 when the "Navitimer" became the official watch of the AOPA (Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association) and the "wing" logo of the association was added to the dial instead of the Breitling "B". The first models did not have a reference number but only the engraved inscription "Breitling" and logo "B" engraved on the back. In 1955, reference number 806 was assigned and the Valjoux calibre 72 was exchanged against the Venus 178. The dial, including the subsidiary dials, was all black, the bezel was named "beads of rice" because of its shape. The "Navitimer" remained in production with this configuration until the early 1960s.

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