Stay on schedule in two time zones with the luxuriously designed Master Control Geographic men's stainless steel automatic watch from famed watchmaker Jaeger-leCoultre. Fashionably styled and meticulously engineered, it features a sublime dial design that simultaneously reveals local time as well as a second time zone. You can easily set the supplemental time zone by selecting a city from the open window below the subdial at the bottom, which includes a day/night indicator to the left.
Select the city representing the chosen time zone in the subdial aperture at 6 o'clock.. |
With the well designed dial, you can view time in two time zones with a quick glance. |
The new-generation automatic movement further enhances this timepiece's reliability. |
The Master Control Geographic has a silver sunray interior dial that's framed by silver triangular hour markers, Arabic numerals at the quarter hours, and small minute indexes. It also includes a date function via a subdial in the upper right. It's completed by a luxuriously supple brown crocodile leather strap. Other features include a scratch-resistant sapphire crystal and water resistance to 50 meters--suitable for swimming but not for diving. The silver stainless steel watch case measures 40mm in diameter (1.57 inches) and 12mm thick (0.47 inches).
The 38-jewel automatic timing mechanism and variable inertia balance is enhanced with ceramic ball bearings that further enhance this watch's reliability. It has a power reserve of 43 hours, which is represented via a subdial at the top left of the dial. An automatic (or self-winding) watch is fitted with a device (rotor) that automatically winds the spring by using the force of gravity. It needs no battery, but it will stop if you have been physically inactive for an extended period of time--as long as you're moving, the watch will stay powered. Swiss watchmaker Abraham-Louis Perrelet invented the self-winding mechanism in 1770. It worked on the same principle as a modern pedometer, and was designed to wind as the owner walked.
About Jaeger-LeCoultre
Originally designed in 1933, the ingeniously designed Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso became an iconic watch and Art Deco fashion piece. |
Founded in 1833 by Antoine LeCoultre and based in Le Sentier, Switzerland, Jaeger-LeCoultre has been at the forefront of timepiece engineering for well over 170 years. In 1844, LeCoultre revolutionized the watch industry with the invention of the millionometer, an instrument with which measurements of up to one thousandths of a millimeter could be made accurately. As a result, precisely finished components could be manufactured, resulting in greatly improved accuracy in timekeeping.
In 1925, the grandson of the firm's founder, David LeCoultre, merged the company with Edmond Jaeger, the exclusive supplier of watch movements to Cartier. Six years later saw the introduction of the famed Reverso, a wristwatch that could be turned 180 degrees within the case, thereby protecting the crystal and dial. More than just a sports watch, the Reverso became an embodiment of the Art Deco movement and an iconic model in luxury watchmaking.
Jaeger-LeCoultre is one of the few watchmakers in Switzerland that still produces its own movements, cases, dials, hands, and bracelets, and virtually every single component in a Jaeger-LeCoultre watch is hand-finished for strict quality control.