New member of the sporty Alpine Eagle is made in ethical 18-carat rose gold and ceramised titanium. The result is an innovative, ultra-contemporary and sporty high-precision chronograph.
Bearing ultimate testimony to the expertise and inventiveness of Chopard's workshops, the Alpine Eagle collection welcomes a new 44 mm-diameter chronograph introducing two novel features: on the one hand, a bi-material case crafted in ethical gold and ceramised titanium; and on the other, a calfskin leather strap. Beneath the Pitch Black dial of the new Alpine Eagle XL Chrono model beats the Chopard 03.05-C flyback chronograph movement. The design of this calibre featuring chronometer-certified precision has earned Chopard three patents.
An design inspired by Nature
Above and beyond its technical prowess, the Alpine Eagle collection has been a
guarantee of aesthetic finesse ever since its launch, entirely aligned with Louis
Sullivan's "form follows function" principle. The new Alpine Eagle XL Chrono model fully reflects this principle. On the right-hand side, the chronograph pushers are subtly and discreetly integrated on either side of the protective bumpers so as to preserve the Alpine Eagle’s characteristic harmony of form and symmetry.
On the Alpine Eagle XL Chrono model, harmony also reigns supreme at the heart of
the Pitch Black dial. Drawing inspiration from the colours of alpine flora and fauna,
Chopard's Co-President and creator of the collection, Karl-Friedrich Scheufele, wanted this hue as a reference to the intense black of mountain nights when wildlife reclaims its rights, reminding us of the extent to which night-time lighting linked to humans and urbanisation disrupts the way of life of surrounding animal species.
As on all Alpine Alpine models, the dial retains its texture and radiant pattern, evoking the eagle's iris. The feather-shaped seconds hand flies over this highly legible display punctuated by raised counters.
The addition of black counters for the 30-minute, small seconds and 12-hour indications
– respectively positioned at 3, 6 and 9 o'clock – has been carefully designed to
enhance the legibility of measurements. This is also the case of the red inlays
punctuating the hands linked to the chronograph function as well as the 100, 160 and
240 graduations on the tachymeter scale. Divided into four sections, this tachymeter
graduation features intervals varying from 5, 10, 20 or 40km/h per line so as to ensure
perfect calculation of average speed measurements.
Avant-garde materials
The extra-large 44-millimetre case of the Alpine Eagle XL Chrono is crafted in ethical
18-carat rose gold and ceramised titanium. The combination of these two noble metals
is a first in watchmaking aesthetics, and even more so in the Alpine Eagle XL Chrono
range, thus far available in Lucent Steel A223 and/or ethical rose gold.
The 18-carat rose gold used to make the case is sourced from an ethical supply chain,
in accordance with the commitment Chopard has upheld for all its watch and jewellery
production since July 2018; while the use of ceramised titanium reflects the avant-
garde spirit of the workshops. This light and ultra-resistant metal is obtained through a
process of titanium oxidation using electro-plasma technology – a treatment that gives
it a hardness of 1000 Vickers and a resistance to shocks and scratches comparable to
that of ceramics. Developed in the aerospace and automotive industries, it has an
anthracite grey colour that does not fade over time and gives the entire watch a sporty,
ultra-contemporary look.
The Alpine Eagle XL Chrono is also the collection’s first series-produced timepiece with a black calf leather strap. Until now, only the Alpine Eagle XL Chrono Only Watch – a one-of-a-kind model designed to support the Monegasque Association against Muscular Dystrophy – had departed from the iconic metal bracelet. Like the latter, the leather strap retains the Alpine Eagle’s characteristic embossed central cap as well as a highly contemporary graphic design. And because style is all about details, its red bridle stitching subtly echoes the chronograph function indications on the dial.
Three patents for a high-precision chronograph movement
At the heart of the case beats a highly sophisticated chronograph movement endowed with a precision chronometer certified by the Swiss Official Chronometer Testing Institute (COSC). Equipped with a central rotor in 22-carat rose gold, Chopard Calibre 03.05-C has a 60-hour power reserve and features an elaborate design guaranteeing accurate adjustments as well as optimal use of the timekeeping functions. Equipped with a column wheel, it represents the culmination of several technical innovations for which Chopard has been awarded three patents, filed for the development of L.U.C Calibre 03.03-L, devised by the engineers of Chopard Manufacture for the L.U.C Chrono One timepiece. First presented in 2006, this chronograph movement equipped with a column wheel, vertical clutch, flyback and small seconds reset functions, as well as a particularly precise jumping minute counter, remains the most innovative in the world. In 2022, the L.U.C. collection will celebrate its 25th anniversary, an opportunity for the Maison to underscore Chopard Manufacture's leading role in innovation and the integration of watchmaking knowledge into its entire production process. With the Chopard 03.05-C movement, produced in larger quantities by the workshops, this cutting-edge technology makes a remarkable entry into the Alpine Eagle collection.
The Alpine Eagle collection: reinterpreting an icon
Devised by three generations of gentlemen in the Scheufele family, the Alpine Eagle collection is a modern reinterpretation of the St. Moritz watch, the first horological creation by Karl-Friedrich Scheufele in the late 1970s. With its pure and assertive design, Alpine Eagle enriches this heritage with powerful inspiration drawn from Nature. A round case with stylised flanks; a crown engraved with a compass rose; a bezel with eight functional indexed screws; a textured dial with deep hues and luminescent indications; as well as an integrated metal bracelet.
Chopard’s independence and integrated skills enable the Maison to perform the entire range of the collection’s production and assembly stages in its own workshops, from movement to bracelet, as well as components and case.
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