Sponsored PostIn 2011, Glashutte Original introduced a new cushion-shaped case to their 20th Century Vintage collection called the Seventies Panorama Date. Last year at Baselworld, Glashutte Original introduced a new Seventies model featuring their new Calibre 37 chronograph movement: the Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date. Here, we compare the silver dial Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date to the brands other chronograph models, as well as the Glashutte Original Seventies Panorama Date. Weve also included some photos of a prototype of the blue dial Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date that visited our store a few months ago. Power reserve indicator in the nine oclock subdial (near empty).The Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date features many more complications than the brands other chronographs that have come before it. The 1960s Chronograph, Senator XL Chronograph, and the now retired Navigator Chronograph all featured versions of the Calibre 39 movement. These chronographs are all non-date models, featuring a bi-compax layout with two subdials. The Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date adds several complications that are a first for Glashutte Original: a big (panorama) date, flyback, 12-hour register, and a power reserve meter. As it is their first column wheel chronograph, the button action is noticeably smoother than their other chronographs. In their press release for the piece, Glashutte Original describes the column wheel mechanism as simplified and containing fewer individual parts than a typical column wheel chronograph. The flyback complication allows the watch to be stopped, reset, and started again by pressing the bottom pusher while the chronograph is running. This is another first for Glashutte Original.The swan neck regulator on the Calibre 39 of the Glashutte Original Seventies Panorama Date. The watch also features a column-wheel chronograph just to the left of the balance-complete. Previous chronographs from Glashutte Original used a cam system instead of a column wheel.Wrist shot of the Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date 1-37-02-02-02-33 (retail $14,900).For a watch with so many features, the tone of the Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date is rather understated. The power reserve indicator is rather subtly introduced as a cut-out in the nine-oclock subdial. When the watch has no power, the cut-out is white. As it gets more power, the white becomes black. Instead of using a subdial for the chronograph hour totalizer, it has a 12-hour counter disk window that is subtly placed right above the center hands. The subdials are subtly recessed and a slightly lighter shade of silver than the galvanized silver dial.Glashutte Original Senator Seventies Panorama date (left) and the new Glashutte Original Seventies Chronograph Panorama Date (right).As would be expected, the Chronograph is considerably taller than the Panorama Date (14.5mm versus 11.5mm). Otherwise, the 40x40mm brushed and polished cases seem almost identical. Both feature subtle touches one would expect from a Glashutte Original: A sapphire case back revealing a three quarter plate, swan neck regulator, and gold inlay in the rotor. Strap models of the Senator 70s Panorama Date are $10,100, while the bracelet models are $11,600. The Senator 70s Chronograph Panorama Date are $14,900 on strap and $16,400 on bracelet. The watch comes in galvanized silver (shown in this post), galvanized ruthenium, and blue. Below are additional photos, most of which compare the silver dial dial Chronograph to the blue dial Panorama Date. Rob Caplan is a fourth generation watch retailer whose family owns Topper Fine Jewelers on the edge of Silicon Valley in Burlingame, California. Topper is an authorized dealer of Muhle-Glashutte, Nomos, OMEGA, Glashutte Original, Longines, Zenith, Ball, Bremont, and other fine Swiss German watch Brands. [...]
