With its debut in 2012, the otherworldly H1Titanium catapulted the young HYT watch company and its game-changing technology straight into the limelight. Winning the GPHG Innovation award at the end of that year, its alien appearance, and taboo combination of liquids and horology turned perceptions on their head, and from that dramatic entrance, one of the most dynamic and successful independent watch brands has continued to produce ever more extraordinary variations on its award-winning concept.
Featuring a camouflage theme dial of smoked sapphire the HYT H1 Air Black Pixel is an absolutely magnificent piece, in its massive case of black DLC titanium, with a pronounced crown guard and rubber clad crown, topped off with a domed sapphire crystal, it is nothing short of spectacular.
Centred around its unique technical tour de force, which uses fluids and miniature hydraulics working in concert with a hand-winding mechanical movement, the HYT H1 Air Black Pixel is an immaculately executed piece of contemporary Haute Horlogerie, which is as unprecedented in its aesthetics as it is utterly fascinating in its technical complexity.
Underneath the sapphire crystal, the dial area is encircled by a black chapter ring which opens onto the cutaway smoked sapphire central panel with titanium overlay and camouflage underprint, and the single luminous hand on the minutes' dial, with the yellow detail of the small seconds and power reserve indicator either side.
Immediately above the chapter ring sits a super fine glass capillary and through it, a translucent yellow liquid is drawn around over the hour indices via HYT’s proprietary hydro-mechanical technology.
As the two bellows in the lower half of the dial expand and contract, from tiny reservoirs beneath the large titanium dome at the 6 they force two immiscible fluids, one dyed yellow, the other clear, around the little tube, in a twelve-hour retrograde cycle to display the hours. The differing and incompatible viscosities of the fluids safeguards against cross-contamination.
While its unconventional and innovative approach to the age-old standards of watchmaking and time display may seem unfamiliar at first glance, its classical regulateur configuration means it’s intuitively simple to understand, and quite irresistible to the eye.
Around the back, a sapphire case back reveals the superb HYT Calibre 101 hand winding hydro-mechanical movement, and a view of its stripped back plates with horizontal Geneva stripes, the balance and escapement, along with the barrel and gear train which is all compacted into the upper half, to accommodate the pair of rhodium-plated bellows. Fully wound, it is good for 65 hours of power reserve.
At 48.8mm the HYT H1 Air Black Pixel is a stunning and dominating watch which packs enormous presence on the wrist, yet with its lightweight, short lugs, close-fitting black alligator strap making for a wrist-hugging fit, it does wear very comfortably for its size.
Recreating a ‘lost’ calibre, Tutima have completely redesigned the UROFA Calibre 59 that once powered their Fliegerchronograph watches from the 1940s and in doing so,
The case is of the Carl Suchy Belvedere Champagne is manufactured from stainless steel, and has a diameter of 40.8mm and a height of 12.2mm
The case is of the Belvedere Bordeaux is manufactured from stainless steel, and has a diameter of 40.8mm and a height of 12.2mm and is
Wonderfully futuristic in both execution and arrangement, the SpaceOne Tellurium watch is a contemporary and simplified heliocentric tellurium, offered in limited edition series, and at