The timeline of the tourbillon began with the pocketwatch. The tourbillon regulator made the jump to wristwatches in 1930, when the watch company LIP makes the first wristwatch with a Tourbillon. Renowned watch houses such as Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet, and of course Breguet followed suit with their first tourbillon wrist models. About the late '60s something foreboding occurred. This was the start of a period of watch manufacturing that is heralded as the most difficult crisis ever experienced by the Swiss watch industry - the advent of the quartz oscillator.
However, even as some watch companies tanked, the watchmakers continued to produce mechanical marvels and hard times was experienced for the next decade or so. Yet the romance of the tourbillon regulator was such that it was being produced again in the very first years of the mechanical revival - the ultrathin automatic winding hammer tourbillon wristwatch from Audemars Piguet in 1986 (Last published retail US $37,000).


The sophisticated dynamograph, set at 12, allows a clear display of the torque supplied by the mainspring. The dynamograph lets the mainspring of the watch to be maintained within ideal winding limits by indicating exactly when the movement should be rewound. In fact, power flow from the mainspring is not linear - above average when the mainspring is tightly wound and tapering off gradually towards the end.

Another innovative feature is the watch's winding and hand-setting system: a special push-piece lets the wearer choose among the crown's several functions ("wind," "set," and "neutral"). This means that it's no longer necessary to extract the crown when the wearer wants to wind the mainspring or set the hands. Also, after the push-piece has commanded the crown to assume the "neutral" position, the crown is entirely uncoupled from the gear train. A designated display on the dial indicates the crown's momentary status. The Concept Watch is crafted from alacrite 602, an exceptionally resistant super-lightweight alloy with hardness of 430 Vickers widely used in aerospace and energy production and it marks the first application in wristwatch production.
Since the introduction of the Audemars Piguet Tourbillon 1, there has been a cornucopia of tourbillon wristwatches, and complicated wristwatches with tourbillon regulators.
One of the earliest artistic applications of the tourbillon regulator is in theTourbillon Sous Trois Points d'Or, or Tourbillon Under 3 Gold Bridges first created by Constant Girard-Perregaux in 1867 for pocket watches. The three bridges hold the barrel, the train, and the balance. The Tourbillon Under 3 Gold Bridges is a stunning rendition of supreme watchmaking technique that exemplifies horology's highest ideals, with its bold clarity and unabashed richness, lyrically merging complexity with simplicity.

Since then the concept of the Tourbillon Under 3 Gold Bridges has been applied to movements having variations such as hand-wound, hand wound with chronograph, one with a minute repeater that renders time audible, automatic with micro-rotor, and the ultimate, the Opera One (US $375,000) which features a carillon striking work that imitates the bells that chime at Westminister Cathedral in London. An Opera Two adds a perpetual calendar with date, day, month, and leap year to the Opera One. Another application of the tourbillon regulator was the flying tourbillon invented in Saxony, Germany in the 1920s by Alfred Helwig. While tourbillon carriages are normally pivot mounted on one side and bridged on the other, or bridged on both sides, the flying tourbillon's carriage is pivot mounted on one side with no supporting bridge to tie it down. This gives the tourbillon the impression that it is floating in mid-air thus voiding all gravitational pull. The flying type of tourbillon regulator is being produced by manufactures like Blancpain, IWC, and Glashutte Original, and independent watchmakers such as Vincent Calabrese.
The revived brand Blancpain has several flying tourbillon offerings that are included with chronographs, split-second chronographs, perpetual calendars, and rattrapante perpetual calendars. Some of their tourbillon models even have an eight days power reserve. With only the same number of turns of the crown required of a common 2 day movement, an 8 days power reserve can be achieved.
In the 1990s, Blancpain created the ultra-complicated Self-Winding Tourbillon Split-Seconds Flyback Chronograph watch (US $115,000). In 2001, Blancpain unveiled the Quattro platinum watch - an elegant self-wound timepiece housing a tourbillon regulator, perpetual calendar, flyback chronograph, and split-seconds chronograph (US $150,000). To celebrate Blancpain's original founding in 1735, a model aptly named the "1735" puts all that is possible in today's microtechnical industry in a diminitive amount of space. This one single wristwatch comprises an ultra flat movement outfitted with moonphase, tourbillon, perpetual calendar, split-seconds chronograph, minute repeater, and automatic winding (US $684,000).
A reverso watch housing a tourbillon regulator was launched by the prestigious watch manufacture Jaeger-LeCoultre in 1993. The legendary Reverso watch was first presented to the world in 1931 and was an immediate hit - and to this day, the Reverso model family is the most well-known product made by Jaeger-LeCoultre.


Born in 1946 in Soochow, China, Kiu Tai Yu, at an early age, discovered a talent for fixing broken watches and clocks. Friends and family would bring him heirlooms of great value to be repaired, and he memorized their mechanical structure and craftsmanship. Entirely self-taught, he built his first watch at the young age of 23. On his 45th birthday in 1991, Kiu Tai Yu astonished the horological world by making the first Asian tourbillon entirely on his own. The last time China made any impact on the horological world was about 10 centuries ago when Su Song, an imperial attendant was commissioned by the dragon throne to construct a time measuring instrument as a standard for the Celestial Kingdom. His ingenious solution was a water clock, the first timepiece ever to have a mechanical escapement, and is thus the direct ancestor of today's Rolex.
Mr. Kiu Tai Yu reduced the elaborate European tourbillon to its barest functional essentials in the Kiu Tai Yu Mystery Tourbillon. The escapement and balance are not housed in a rotating cage and its bridge (as in the traditional tourbillon), and without visible means of support. To create the illusion, Mr. Kiu Tai Yu suspends the balance wheel, with the balance spring underneath, from an invisible bar of crystal. Although Mr. Kiu Tai Yu has attended every Baselworld show since 1992 exhibiting his unique watches, sorry his watches aren't for sale. For Your Eyes Only!
In 1994, in celebration of Omega's 100th anniversary (1894-1994), Omega created the world's first Central Tourbillon wristwatch (US $40,000.00). For the first time, the tourbillon mechanism running at 21,600 vph holds a major place - in the center of the watch. The hour and minute hands are painted on two revolving sapphire discs. The gear mechanism for the sapphire discs is moved to the periphery of the dial, to make room for the escapement and tourbillon cage in the center, which itself carries the seconds hand the OMEGA symbol O. Due to the layout of the gear mechanism, the crown is used only for winding up the watch with time setting functions provided from a wheel on the back of the watch.


The IWC 7 days Portuguese Tourbillon Mystere (US $89,000): The flying tourbillon seems to float freely above the black wheel that propels it.
Zenith presented its first tourbillon at Baselworld in 2004. Three years in the making, Zenith's El Primero Grande ChronoMaster XXT (US $104,000) combines a tourbillon with a chronograph and is the world's first and only tourbillon with a balance that beats 36,000 times per hour. The tourbillon is incorporated into an automatic chronograph movement and is encircled by a date ring that moves counter-clockwise.
The name "Frank Muller" is no stranger to watch enthusiasts. The meteoric rise that has characterized the Frank Muller brand in only one decade is without equal in recent watch history. Launched in 1992, Frank Muller's line of mechanical timepieces, marvelous both inside and outside, feature complex pieces as minute repeaters, perpetual calendars, and of course tourbillons. Among his more celebrated watches is the Tourbillon Revolution, introduced in 2002 to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the company. Protected by several patents, what makes this tourbillon watch so different and exciting is that with the simple push of a button on the case, the hour and minute hands sweep to the 12:00 position and like magic, the tourbillon cage rises from the movement level to literally hover over the dial for better viewing. The axial displacement forces the tourbillon cage to the surface - the hands taken out of the way - remain at 12 o'clock for as long as the tourbillon lift button remains pressed. An extremely complex mechanism, this timepiece also offers power reserve of approximately 70 hours. Among the other watch brands, Frank Muller's Tourbillon Revolution series are perhaps the only tourbillon watches to have such a unique feature, a timepiece paying homage as no other to the playful instincts of man.
A year later, he outdid himself once again by presenting to the world his Double Axis Tourbillon, aptly called the Revolution 2. Attached by suspension and sitting in a spherical cage like a ballerina, the double axis tourbillon revolves along two axes, rotates as if on tippy toes, while simultaneously performing a series of somersaults. On either side of the dial opening are two retrograde indicators - one going from 0 to 60, to show the revolving time the tourbillon cage makes along its more traditional axis while also functioning as the seconds hand, and the other indicator graduated from 0 to 8 minutes to show the time the tourbillon cage takes to revolve along its new double "revolutionary" axis. Costs of ownership for one will set you back about US $635,000.00, give or take a few dollars.
After Tourbillon Revolution 2, it was almost an obligation for the company to present Tourbillon Revolution 3. And present it, they did - the new three axis tourbillon rotates on three axes, the cages revolve at varying speeds: the inner cage every 60 seconds, the second cage every 8 minutes, and the large, outer cage once an hour. The complete movement comprises 289 finely crafted components worked individually by hand.
Since the tourbillon's 200th anniversary in 2001, the number of brands incorporating the tourbillon into their own wristwatches has increased exponentially. While in 2001, there may have been fewer than fourteen companies to feature such a highlight in their collections, at last count in 2005 there were more than fifty doing so. Nearly all major brands as of this writing has a tourbillon timepiece in their collection.
This year 2006 will continue to see more and more brands jumping on this "whirlwind bandwagon."
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