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Girard-Perregaux Minute Repeater Flying Bridges: A Fusion of Horological Excellence

March 12

Girard-Perregaux has introduced a new masterpiece, the Minute Repeater Flying Bridges, showcasing a pinnacle of traditional watchmaking. This timepiece artfully combines a minute repeater, a tourbillon, and an automatic micro-rotor winding system. Its design is a modern take on the brand's distinctive Three Bridges architecture, presenting an openworked aesthetic where the intricate components appear to levitate within the case, highlighting the brand's long-standing proficiency in creating sophisticated chiming mechanisms and innovative watch designs.

Contemporary Design and Acoustic Engineering

The Minute Repeater Flying Bridges features a 46mm pink gold case, meticulously designed not only for its aesthetic appeal but also for its acoustical properties. The generous dimensions facilitate optimal sound resonance, while box-shaped sapphire crystals on both sides of the watch act as miniature sound chambers, enhancing the clarity and projection of the chimes. This innovative design also provides an unobstructed view of the movement, which appears to float within its confines. The watch incorporates a clever slide mechanism for activating the repeater, seamlessly integrated into a monobloc case middle. This enhances water resistance, a significant achievement for minute repeaters, allowing for a 30m rating, thereby offering a practical advantage over many traditional minute repeater designs.

Mirroring other pieces from the Bridges collection, the movement itself serves as the dial. The watch is distinguished by two contemporary pink gold bridges, designed in the Neo style, which span horizontally across the movement, with an additional bridge located on the reverse side. The tourbillon, positioned prominently at 6 o’clock, features the brand's signature lyre-shaped cage and subtly doubles as a small seconds indicator. The dial's periphery is adorned with a slender pink gold flange, hosting applied hour markers that emit a blue luminescence, complementing the skeletonized pink gold hands also treated with luminescent material, ensuring readability in various lighting conditions.

Advanced Movement and Exquisite Craftsmanship

At the heart of this timepiece lies the newly developed Calibre GP9530, an in-house automatic movement meticulously engineered for this grand complication. Measuring 43.55mm in diameter and 10.75mm in thickness, the calibre comprises 475 components and 47 jewels. It operates at a frequency of 21,600 vibrations per hour and boasts a power reserve of at least 60 hours. What truly sets this movement apart is its ability to integrate three complex mechanisms—the minute repeater, the tourbillon, and an automatic winding system with a micro-rotor—into a single, harmonious architecture. This combination is particularly noteworthy given the challenges of incorporating automatic winding into minute repeaters, primarily due to space constraints and potential noise interference.

To overcome the inherent challenges of integrating an automatic winding system into a minute repeater, Girard-Perregaux has ingeniously mounted the white gold micro-rotor on a jewel instead of a conventional ball bearing. This design choice ensures silent rotation, preventing any mechanical noise from compromising the purity of the chimes. The entire movement is designed with acoustics as a priority: the repeater hammers are strategically placed on the dial side for unobstructed sound travel, and the mainplate and bridges are crafted from titanium for superior rigidity and efficient vibration transmission. The plate is securely screwed into the case, allowing vibrations from the gongs to propagate seamlessly through the movement. The gongs themselves are formed from a single piece of metal, eliminating potential dampening joints, and the centrifugal governor, which regulates the chiming sequence, is discreetly positioned on the movement's rear to maintain acoustic integrity. The finishing of the movement is extraordinary, requiring over 440 hours of assembly and finishing, with 240 hours dedicated to decoration alone, including more than 1,300 polished chamfers and 295 interior angles. Each timepiece also includes a small engraved plate bearing the initials of the master watchmaker responsible for its meticulous assembly and finishing, subtly placed beneath a bridge featuring the jewel count and 'Swiss-made' inscriptions.

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