Victorinox Chrono Classic
A
unique microsite for a one-of-a-kind chronograph.
Modern,
innovative, ingenious and easy to use: these are the standout attributes of the
new Chrono Classic watch, the star of the Victorinox Swiss Army stand at
Baselworld 2013. This fall, Victorinox Swiss Army is launching an Internet
microsite whose high-tech web technology showcases the Chrono Classic’s unique
“three step” features.
At
Baselworld last spring, the Chrono Classic conquered all. Now the rest of the
world can make its discovery at http://chronoclassic.victorinox.com. Like the
watch it celebrates, the site is modern, innovative, ingenious and easy to use.
Especially new and noteworthy is its web navigation, which uses a unique
parallax effect technique that allows for high speed movement through images
arranged in layers, creating an almost 3D effect. Its simplicity and
intuitiveness make it easy, fun and very informative.
The
microsite also has a video presentation of the Chrono Classic and a full
introduction to the entire collection. This year’s highlights are two new
monochrome originals with matching dials and bezels: "dark gray"
(Black Ice PVD-treated), with a black, organically tanned leather strap or a
metal bracelet, and champagne (gold PVD) with a brown leather strap or metal
bracelet.
Chrono
Classic is a "three-step" watch, meaning it’s the very image of the
famous Swiss Army knife on which it is based. A classic timepiece dedicated to
the reading of hours and minutes, it is also a chronograph accurate to the
hundredth of a second. The transition from one mode to the other is performed
through a simple double click of the crown. This returns the three central
hands to 12 o’clock and turns the date window at 6 o'clock into a counter
displaying the zero-zero position. Activating the chronograph is simple--just
press the button at 2 o'clock. The central red hand then counts off the
seconds, while the other two count minutes and hours. Another click stops the
timing operation, and the window at 6 o’clock shows the hundredth of a second.
Pressing the second button at 4 o’clock resets the chronograph.
Even
more exceptional: you can switch back to normal time-reading mode while the
chronograph continues running. A double click on the crown and voila! This
technical prowess is due to the watch’s Swiss Made FM13D quartz movement, which
is manufactured by Soprod, a Bernese Jura company with which Victorinox Swiss
Army has worked closely. This collaboration has resulted in an exclusive
development: the numerical representation of 1/100th of a second, which is
performed by two small rotating discs on the lower part of the dial. The
display form of the Grande Date, a perpetual calendar, is another unique
feature of the movement.
This
technical innovation has also inspired the Chrono Classic’s design. The
guilloche decoration covering both discs recalls the shape and decoration of
Swiss Army Officer’s knife. Other aesthetic features also pay homage to the
origins and values of Victorinox. The axis of rotation of the discs echoes to
way blades fold back into the knife. The index and counterweight of the red central
seconds hand also borrow their shape from the famous multi-purpose tool. In
short, and in so many ways, Chrono Classic is the synthesis of Victorinox Swiss
Army know-how.
Features:
Swiss
Made
Case:
41 mm brush polished stainless-steel case
Scratch
resistant sapphire crystal with triple anti-reflective coating
Water
resistant to 100 meters (10 ATM / 330 feet)
Brushed
stainless-steel bezel
Screwed-in
stainless steel caseback
Dials,
bezels and bracelets
“Dark
grey” dial and bezel with Black Ice PVD coating, biologically tanned
black leather strap or stainless-steel
bracelet
Champagne
dial and bezel, gold PVD coating, biologically tanned
brown leather strap or stainless-steel
bracelet
Luminescent
hour and minute hands
Special
"Swiss Army Officer’s Knife" guilloche above counters
Movement:
Swiss-made Soprod SOP FM13D quartz movement
Functions:
Hours, minutes, seconds, tachymeter (on the bezel),
chronograph (numerically displayed 1/100th
second),
large date, perpetual calendar
Availability:
Fall 2013
