The latest and most likely the last version of the Urwerk UR-110
Transcription
The latest and most likely the last version of the Urwerk UR-110
The latest and most likely the last version of the Urwerk UR-110 By Elizabeth Doerr 99 With its most recent timepieces, Urwerk enhances the relationship between humans and their devices. The UR-110 in brushed titanium. ne look at the blackened platinum Urwerk UR110PTH, pictured on this month’s cover, and you can see why Urwerk co-founder and head watchmaker Felix Baumgartner calls this red-dial final edition of the automatic 110 series “Urwerk’s bad boy.” Introduced in 2010, the 110 series features a case made of a titanium aluminum nitride alloy time display on the right side of the watch, which gives a completely new visual to the emblematic Urwerk satellite system. “We are looking at a moving future at Urwerk,” Baumgartner says. Half Man, Half Machine This year, Baumgartner and Urwerk added not only this reddened 110PTH, but the Genevabased independent brand also updated its UR210 line, which debuted in 2012, adding a (AlTiN) with a hardness of 3,500 Vickers. “The 210 displays a relationship to its owner,” Baumgartner said. “In a way, half man, half machine.” Its skeletonized retrograde aluminum hand containing the hour numeral also indicates the minutes: like magic, when the hand arrives back at the start after the passing of an hour, the numeral has inexplicably become that of the following hour. And there’s more. In a first for a wristwatch, Left: Martin Frei’s drawings for the UR-110 Below left: The back of the UR-110 in platinum & the UR-110 in red gold Below: An exploded view of the complicated satellite system underneath the UR-110’s extrathick sapphire crystal. 101 the 210 monitors “the symbiotic relationship between man and his mechanical watch,” Baumgartner explains. A further evolution of the automatic turbines that have graced Urwerk’s recent movements allows this wristwatch to “communicate” with its owner. An indicator at the 11 o’clock position lets the wearer know how much he or she is moving around. How does the watch know this? Since the kinetic motion of the wrist supplies an automatic movement’s rotor with energy to wind the mainspring, it can be used to determine the owner’s activity level. When Urwerk’s clever indication shows red, it means the wearer is not moving around enough to keep the mainspring supplied. If the hand is in the green area, it means the current arm motion is sufficient to keep the watch optimally wound. Thus, in effect, your watch communicates with you. New model : EMC But almost even more exciting than the immediate present at Urwerk is its future, exemplified by a prototype movement shown under the table at the recent BaselWorld. The new movement will be officially launched in the fall within a brand new watch destined to kick off a whole line at Urwerk. Called EMC, the new movement was devised by Baumgartner and his “U” research division, a sort of experimental laboratory within the dozen-strong company. This division is reserved for the craziest of projects– mechanics that other watchmakers certainly only dream of. Thus far, this division has brought forth the UR-CC1 King Cobra (limited to twenty-five pieces in white gold and twenty-five in AlTiN) and the UR-1001 Zeit Device (limited to just eight pieces). The idea behind the EMC was one that has long occupied Baumgartner’s brain and was already detectable in the 210: the interactivity between a mechanical watch and its wearer. In this new caliber, Baumgartner has made very real the idea that a watch could electronically determine its own rate and convey that data to the owner immediately. Like wearing a Witschi machine, which is Q&A Felix Baumgartner Co-founder , Urwerk By Andrew Daley Forum Moderator, PuristSPro.com How did you begin your career as a watchmaker? I finished watchmaking school in the 1990s. At this time all the complicated watches were very traditional with multiple hands to display different aspects of time. This was a period when Franck Muller was making the most complicated pieces with multiple hands. We had to stop and find another approach, with new values; we wanted to follow a different path. My grandfather worked with IWC and my father restored clocks and I wanted something to keep me going for another forty years! I started working with Martin Frei, which in English means free, and he is truly free. He creates movies, conceptual art and architecture and he brought new, free ideas to watchmaking. He provided me with the possibilities to go in new directions. In the beginning people did not understand what we were trying to do. But we kept with our vision and were sure that one day people would start to respect and appreciate what we were creating. We persisted and then in 2003 we released the 103 and people’s eyes were opened. The control board on the rear was a new idea for wristwatches with the ability to control the watch from the outside, although the original idea was used on clocks and pocket watches and is actually a very old idea. Can you describe the collaborative process between yourself and Martin Frei? I decide mostly on the mechanical and functional side. Martin is the designer-artist, but I also contribute to the design and sometimes Martin contributes to the mechanics. It is a true collaboration. The technical ideas come from my side and we Ping-Pong ideas back and forth. Eventually we are both happy. And then we pass our ideas to the engineers. Then Dominic and Cyrano (whom I met in watchmaking school twenty years ago) develop the computer drawings. Then these go to our Atelier in Zurich where we start to fashion parts on our CNC machines. We have the ability to make most of our parts today as well as the dials. The only parts we get from specialist outside suppliers are screws and rubies. For the cylindrical hairspring (spiral) we worked with a company to develop it for us. A cylindrical hairspring is always balanced. We have a team of fifteen people producing 150 watches per year. We have kept this number static for the last six years. This is the right balance to pay back our investments, to invest in the future, but not to have a company structure that is too big. It is actually a challenge to keep the company at this size because everyone around us wants more. But I impose this because between creation, innovation, sales and cash flow this is the right balance. Many companies feel they need to grow for financial reasons, but we are happy. In Geneva we do assembly and communication. Zurich is concept, construction and machining. I spend a lot of time travelling between the two, but my family is in Geneva. Do you feel the pressure of deadlines and how do you approach the watch fairs? After fifteen years you develop a certain rhythm. We do use the watch fairs, not so much to launch a new product, but to have a goal for the whole team. We could play our Ping-Pong game forever [laughing], but the fairs allow us to finish the game at a point when we are reasonably happy. At a certain moment someone has to say: “let’s do it” and I say to the team “Basel is coming!” and that focuses everyone on that goal. The satellite display of time has been a focus of Urwerk for fifteen years. Can you take this design further? Over the last fifteen years we have followed a consistent design with the revolving satellites. We do this because it is a very simple and intelligent alternative way to tell the time. With one glance you see the hour as well as the minutes displayed. This idea came from time spent with my father. He was restoring clocks and I saw a clock without hands, a 1652 Companus Brothers clock, which was designed to read the time at night. We have done it only for fifteen years! Other companies have been making tourbillons for 200 years [laughing]! This is something we like and we always think we can push it further and adapt it to what is technically possible today. So we continue to slowly evolve. We now have four different models in our lineup. [There was a fifth one in the very beginning in the 101.] So every two to three years we introduce a new satellite watch. And in between we come up with other crazy designs. We have done the Cobra (the CC-1), which is also a new development. In another year we will come out with a new approach to watchmaking, not a different display of time telling. We see the possibilities offered in the mechanics and techniques of time telling. You have had some famous collaboration over the years. Is this something that you plan more of? I am open for collaborations with others but I don’t go searching. We have enough to do. In 2001 we did the Goldpfeil, in 2005 the Opus 5 and now the Nitro (C3H5N3O9) with MB&F. Max (Busser) and I met through the 103. He was quite impressed with it and we have continued the relationship since 2003. We haven’t collaborated on an actual MB&F Machine, but we did the Nitro with Max: MB&F made the case and we designed the movement, the mechanical side. It was a great exchange between the two of us because we respect each other. Working with a different team is very inspiring for all of us as it makes us think outside our usual experiences. How do you balance between traditional horology and modern production? We use a lot of ARCAP (a copper nickel alloy) that is more stable than brass to machine. We also use a lot of titanium, which is light. Much of our movement requires lightness and strength. But mostly we use traditional materials. We have CNC machines. But while most of the watch industry uses CNC for quantity, we don’t use it this way. We use it for the creation of three-dimensional parts and for the precision it provides. Some of these parts are impossible to do with traditional manual machines. The finishing and assembling, however, is manual and traditional. Nearly everything comes from the past: the fine tuning on the 103 comes from ideas of an A.L. Breguet pocket watch, the time indication comes from Campanus night clock, the telescopic minute hand idea I also adapted from an old clock so the ideas are from history. The three planetary gears around the fixed center wheel are actually from the tourbillon concept. The complex cases and sapphire was difficult to create in the early days. Have manufacturing techniques made things easier today? It is still more complicated than a round case but it is really just a case of finding the right people to work with. The main challenge in Urwerk watches is the design and construction of the movement. For example the minute hand has a clearance from the sapphire of only 0.1mm. You were there at the beginning of the Internet. How has it contributed to your company? Today it is easier to accept our products because we have our own established niche, but we still have to explain our ideas to our potential customers. The Internet and watch forums have been extremely important in reaching people. We obviously need each other. The forums would not exist without the watchmakers. This is a very good synergistic situation. In the beginning of Urwerk there was no Internet for us. It was tough in those days. How did you try to sell your watches in those early days? We set up at Basel and exhibited along with the AHCI. Before Vianney Halter and Francois-Paul Journe I was a member of the Academy. It started slowly and we made no salary. You had to believe in what you were doing. I worked for Vacheron Constantin at the time to make money and invested everything into Urwerk. For the first seven years we made no money and just invested in the company. What advice would you give to a watchmaker wanting to start his own company today? I would say first try to learn and understand the basics and the tradition, followed by the complications and the quality. Then look at today’s possibilities with materials and machining. Then use the best of both worlds: the modern and the traditional, and do it in a passionate and honest way, wanting to go further in watchmaking and not wanting to profit out of the company. Martin Frei (left) and Felix Baumgartner How do you handle after-sales services? We have a stable volume of watches coming in for service: between fifty and sixty watches per year. Watchmakers are responsible for the service of their own watches, both in and outside the warranty period. And if one watchmaker leaves, his replacement will take over both the position and the portfolio of watches. For three months they work together and hand over their knowledge and pieces. And when a watch comes back, like the 103, we update it with the newer modifications. The minimum service time is two months and maximum is three months. Service cost is approximately 500 to 1,000 Swiss francs, which includes case refinishing. Straps are extra to the cost, and usually need replacing. We don’t need to make a profit on it but we cover our costs and time. What are the long-term plans for the company? Maintain our volume and to continue innovation. Even moving more to in-house production. We will continue the revolving satellite system and will also develop crazy and different watches. We want to keep this balance. The company is very stable. During the peak of the world economic crisis in 2007-08 it was difficult for six months. This was even more noticeable after the euphoria that preceded that period, but we have set up the company in a very balanced way and we are very stable and strong. We have no external backers and just finance ourselves. This took some years. Andrew Daley is a forum moderator on PuristSPro. com, where this article first appeared in a longer form. 103 The UR-210, launched in late 2010. Below left: The EMC will combine electronics with mechanics. Below: Could this new EMC be the next Urwerk ‘bad boy’? ics for the first time, making individual regulation of the movement possible.” The high-performance capacitor in the EMC must be wound to charge it. This is done using a foldout winder found on the case. The winding charges a miniscule motor within the case, which in turn powers an LED sensor placed on the balance wheel—Urwerk’s own balance wheel, in fact, created in ARCAP, an alloy that the Geneva-based brand prefers due to its nonmagnetic and anti-corrosive properties. The little optical sensor strategically placed on the balance measures its motions, which are then translated into +/- seconds per day and shown on a display that comes to life when a button on the case is pushed. The wearer can then regulate as needed. A moving future The upcoming EMC launch is the biggest step “The upcoming EMC caliber is designed to practically take its own pulse and ‘tell’ the wearer the result.” a brand of a movement rate-reading device found on every watchmaker’s bench, the new caliber will in effect communicate information to its wearer regarding the movement’s rate precision. The EMC is designed to practically take its own pulse and “tell” the wearer the result, after which he or she can adjust the rate thanks to a cleverly positioned screw on the back of the watch case. This latter concept was first seen on the UR-103. It allows the wearer to regulate his or her own watch using the precision adjustment function found on the control board on the case back. By combining electronics with mechanics in what is to date Urwerk’s first full-blown in-house movement, the upcoming EMC movement can measure its own rate. “This movement is outfitted with an electronic eye to monitor the mechanics,” Baumgartner explains in his typically low-key, yet emotional, way. “It merges haute horlogerie and electron- forward into holistic manufacturing that Urwerk has ever undertaken. The EMC is the brand’s very first completely integrated inhouse movement. It will boast double spring barrels for eighty hours of power reserve and will likely never be usable in another watch, making it a true bespoke movement for the forthcoming timepiece. The mechanics beat at 4 Hz, while the electronic oscillator beats at 16,000,000 Hz. Its “artificial intelligence” is capable of calculating the difference between the movement’s rate and its reference oscillator—and translating it into seconds per day. “This is a revolution in the world of precision watchmaking,” Baumgartner proudly adds. If so, the new EMC could be Urwerk’s next “bad boy.”
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