
At the tail end of 2024 Breitling released a limited edition 140th anniversary collection which included the Navitimer B19 Perpetual Calendar Chronograph. A watch that featured the Swiss maison’s first ever manufacture perpetual calendar chrono movement. Now that movement is making its first appearance outside of the anniversary limited edition, joining the core Navitimer collection in the form of the Breitling Navitimer B19 Perpetual Calendar Chronograph in ice blue.
The watch measures a broad 43mm in diameter in stainless steel with a bi-metallic construction that sees the bezel produced from platinum. It adds a luxe edge to the sporty aviation watch that’s fitting for an haute horology perpetual calendar. Adding to its wrist presence is a thickness of 14.94mm, making it something of a wrist monster. But hey, if you’re going to show off any watch, why not a platinum bezel perp cal?
One of the largest changes between this edition of the B19 Perpetual Calendar Chronograph and its anniversary limited version, aside from the case materials, is the dial. Instead of golden coloured it’s now a lovely shade of sky blue (in watchmaking light blue is a very common pairing with platinum, especially from the likes of Rolex). The pale tone really lets the sunray brushing come to the fore and contrasts nicely with the darker navy blue of the moonphase subdial at 12 o’clock. The subdials also show contrast by having snailed finishing rather than sunbrushing.
There is a lot of information on display here. Starting with the bezel it features a circular slide rule scale, which you can learn all about here. Inside that is the standard hour and minute scale with baton markers that also doubles up as the chronograph seconds scale. The four subdials then display moonphase at 12, 30-minute timer and date at 3 o’clock, leap year and month at 6, and then finally small seconds and days of the week at 9.
All these myriad complications are controlled by the Breitling Manufacture Caliber B19 automatic movement. It has a 96-hour power reserve, which is seriously impressive for a watch as complicated as this due to the power intensive nature of housing multiple functions. It’s also COSC chronometer certified, ensuring great accuracy and reliability in multiple conditions.
It’s worth noting though that while this is now a core collection model, that doesn’t mean it’s not still extremely exclusive (if the platinum bezel wasn’t enough to communicate that). On the steel, seven-link bracelet it has a price of £25,400. Whether it’s expanding their technical, in-house production or adding more brands to their banner like Universal Genève and (rumour has it) Gallet, it’s nice to see Breitling pushing their boundaries.
Price and Specs:
Model:
Breitling
Navitimer B19 Perpetual Calendar Chronograph
Ref:
PB1920251C1A1
(bracelet), PB1920251C1P1 (leather strap)
Case:
43mm
diameter x 14.94mm thickness, stainless steel
Dial:
Ice
blue
Water resistance:
30m
(3 bar)
Movement:
Breitling
calibre B19, automatic, COSC-certified, 39 jewels, 374 parts
Frequency:
28,800
vph (4 Hz)
Power reserve:
96h
Functions:
Hours,
minutes, seconds, chronograph, perpetual calendar
Strap:
Stainless
steel seven row bracelet with butterfly clasp or black alligator leather strap with stainless steel folding buckle
Price:
£25,150
(strap), £25,400 (bracelet)
More details at Breitling.
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