Beneath the hands of the Perrelet Turbine and above the dial backdrop, often decorated with a eye catching motif, a representation of a Turbine spins back and forth.
The blades swivel creating constant motion on the dial, and is the front component of a new take on Perrelet's original "double rotor" Collection.
Perrelet utilized the original "double rotor calibre (Perrelet P-181), patented in 1995, for the Turbine Collection. The Perrelet P-181 is fixed with two rotors, one on the dial and the other on the case back. The rotor on the dial is a moving testimony to the horological break through invented by Perrelet's founder Abraham Louis Perrelet in 1770. He invented the self-winding concept, whereby the motion of a person can wind the mainspring thereby providing energy to power the watch. This is what is known as an automatic timepiece.
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Perrelet Double Rotor |
At BaselWorld 2009, Perrelet unveiled an entirely new dimension of the "double rotor' by drawing inspiration from the field of aeronautics. The Turbine Timepiece has quickly become the companies signature model, not because of its highly complex complications, but for its popular attraction.
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Perrelet has introduced many Turbine Models created to suit many tastes. Perrelet did not change its movement, but rather substituted a rather plain looking dial side oscillating weight with memorizing blades, providing eye catching movements and changing bands of color and design every time the wearer moves his arm. Perrelet used its tried and tested double rotor movement Perrelet P-181 to make what was good even better, and it worked. It worked to such an extent that the Perrelet Turbine has infiltrated beyond watch aficionados to the general public just like the Rolex Oyster's, Cartier Roadster, Audemar Piguet Royal Oaks and IWC Portugeuse. This is the type of design watch manufactures clamber for - a design that will thrust them into the limelight and hang on the lips of the "man on the street".
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Below is a You Tube Clip of the Perrelet Turbine in action.
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