Very nice. Regarding the counterweight on the second hand, could you make it sit further away from the centre point, displacing it from the central black region and thereby making more of a feature of the fact that it contrasts with the white of the hands as it passes? Screwdown crown? And I know no one else will want this, but what about a date window at three, white numerals on a black background?
Martin
Possibly in the minority here, but I generally prefer watches with date.
Looks good, just think the Great Britain looks a bit unbalanced.
Cheers
Simon
Ralph Waldo Emerson: We ask for long life, but 'tis deep life, or noble moments that signify. Let the measure of time be spiritual, not mechanical.
Hmm... S.U.F has already snatched the Myrsky model name. Any decent WW2 planes left? Lancaster perhaps, for the night ops theme colour?
Very nice looking concept!! Given the dark colour scheme, how about naming it after the Westland Lysander, known for night-time STOL clandestine pick-ups and deliveries? (BTW, there is a beautifully restored specimen in the Udvar-Hazy Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum (near Dulles airport, Virginia))
Cheers,
Gert
Fantastic design.
Anywhere between 38 - 40mm and I'll buy one
A Scottish watchmaker who goes by the name of obsoletewatchparts on MWR (a member here?) posted this photo recently. He had a Smiths W10 with a wrecked, i.e. over-restored, case so did this to it.
Credit photo- obsoletewatchparts, MWR forum.
like the 'Made in England' along the bottom of the dial there!
Last edited by Broussard; 12th August 2013 at 20:37.
looks really nice - been after something like this but it'd need to be 40mm for me as I've got fat wrists!
Love the design and the proportions are spot on.
Dave
Love it on either leather or plain black NATO.
I'd love it to be a hand wind if possible.
I'm also in the minority as I'd like it to be 39-40mm......but I'd buy it anyway!
That looks great, Chris. 40mm plus a date-function would be perfect.
Cheers,
Jay
Not PVD but I love the second hand on this 38mm Ogival. Love the concept!
Really like design but 38mm too small. Would consider if 42mm+
I'm with Optimum: I like everything about that.
Torn between the original design and the revision with the tipped seconds hand (which, possibly successfully, sacrifices legibility, clarity, and sound design for flashy design-by-committee IMO).
Yes please. Love the simplicity and instant readability. Less IS more.
Hand wind might put it put it to close to the 29a though?
Totally agree with the above. Looks better without the green tip IMHO.
Simply lovely & would fit the gap vacated by my PVD Hamilton perfectly, if the price is right i'm in.
Great work, Chris. Love it.
If I were being super-picky, I'd love it if the green on the second hand extended exactly as far as the hour marker, not to just beyond, and if the shaped end only crossed the black of the main hands, that would be perfect, too.
How about MADE IN | BRITAIN to introduce some balance to the text at the bottom?
Supplied with a black leather NATO and nylon NATO would be perfect (black fittings, but no green would make the green bits on the watch even more subtle imho).
Looks fantastic.
38mm is perfect. No bigger than 40.
The trend for big watches makes me want to vomit with rage.
That is a very handsome watch. Great black and green contrast. Manual wind me thinks.
I like it as it is with no date and no bracelet. 38mm would be a perfect size.
I like it, but I think it is missing something.
Firstly, the name needs to be something aeronautical, maybe a lesser known aircraft. My emotional thinking immediately went to the V planes due to the Falklands connection, but they are also pretty naff names....
For good or bad, the one thing Bremont tend to bring to the party is a design "feature". It may be the coloured central barrel or a tail to a second hand, but they do it quite well.....and charge for the privilege. I do think this watch needs that extra thing to avoid being a Smiths equivalent of a general purpose watch.
I will leave the more imaginative amongst us to come up with the ideas, but I think maybe a velcro strap with some kind of linked design feature to the watch itself may just lift this to perfection.
Oh, and of course a date, because all watches should have one.
The Seafire was the naval version of the Spitfire, adapted for aircraft carrier use - isn't that aeronautical enough or lesser known aircraft enough?
The V bombers is not such a daft suggestion, perhaps not for this watch but something in the future. There were V bombers based at RAF Finningley - so there would be a nice Yorkshire connection - and I don't agree about the naffness; Smiths Vulcan or Smiths Victor or Smiths Valiant sound rather splendid in my not so humble opinion.
As for the date, I believe Mr Flatts has said in the past 'If you want to know the date, buy a newpaper'.
Sorry, was not aware of the Seafire connection....regardless it will sound more naval to many observers.
As a Yorkshireman, I used to go to Finningley as a kid, and that is where my emotional link to the V Bombers comes from. From a purely marketing perspective, Vulcan has the Star Trek overtones, Victor is maybe a bit 'Meldrew' in the UK and I had, embarrassingly, forgotten about the Valiant.
I am sure I am in the minority, but I always like a date as it helps me in meetings remember it at a glance.....I could use a phone, iPad, PC or Newspaper, but I like to look at my watch :-)
In consultation with Mr Platts the size will be 38-40mm, PVD case, stainless case back, no date, name as is, Green stripe NATO. Movement TBC.
Would really like it if that green detail leather strap could be in there somewhere too.
Otherwise that sounds great.
I feel a bit speaking out of turn, but I prefer the second hand without the green tip. I find it a little distracting, and kind of a detail just for its own sake. Also 38mm and a flat crystal would be my preference. Anyway, I really like the design. My father is a private pilot and I spent a lot of time around planes and their equipment growing up, and this hits the mark for me.
That looks really lovely, and I'd be very tempted even though I'm not a PVD fan; of course if I were putting in my tuppence's worth, a non-PVD option would be great...
The more I look, the more I think this was right before the design-by-committee adjustment. So much cleaner, crisper, and clearer without distraction.
At 38mm, that makes it slightly smaller than a PRS-3 yes?
Lovely.
Fondest memory I have from my time at Westlands was watching one of these beauties buzz the airfield repeatedly, everyone was crammed at the windows looking for the next pass. Westlands of course built a lot of these planes. The watch is a fitting tribute to a fantastic part of our aviation heritage.
Just a thought... How well would the PVD'd treated crown stand up to daily winding with a mechanical movement?
I said earlier that I think manual wind is perfect but I'd be very happy with quartz and considering the PRS-10 is now discontinued I think this Smiths is its ideal replacement in the Platts legacy.
David
I don't believe that TF is in competition with Bremont specifically, however it would also be a little daft not to learn lessons from others. Almost all successful design orientated brands carry a design theme or set of themes.
One of the biggest differentiators between the big brands and the small is the link between watch head and strap/bracelet. As we all know, Eddie goes the extra mile in this regard compared to other smaller producers, often using specially sourced or manufactured items. I do however believe that the step beyond this is actually the design equivalent of in-house movements. Once the two items carry a theme together the watch becomes a different proposition.
As for less is more......I have worn a Smiths Everest almost every day since the launch. I even 'cope' without a date.
Is it ready now?.... can I have it now please? please pretty please
What about lume? I was wondering if there is a way of producing a backlit dial appearance.