Watch

Swatch Sistem51 is the most affordable suitable watch in the world

When Swatch hit the enormous three-O in March 2021, the fashion-watch occurrence commandeered an whole floor of the Baselworld exchange fair, filling it with every single one of their 5,000-or-so watches. Something big was going to happen, and it sure did: the Sistem51. One hundred watch, that became the talk of a town more used to 10,000 price tags.
Like its legendary vinyl forebear, Sistem51 sticks to (surprise, surprise) 51 parts, but — amazingly — it is currently a purely mechanical watch, rather than battery-powered quartz, together with all its cogs mounted on a single twist. Oh, and it is made solely by robots in a way like no other.
Some were, and remain snobbish about its plastic micro-mechanics, but you can not help but goggle at the achievement of creating a self-winding motion with not even half the usual components, packing 90 hours of power reserve (standard is about 40), also claiming a precision of +/-7 seconds a day — nearly precise enough to earn’chronometer’ status, of which Rolex, Omega and Breitling all boast.

Currently available in metal’Irony’ guise, for a dressier look, Sistem51 is the anti-fashion fashion watch: defiantly sophisticated, intentionally anarchic.
How a Swatch Sistem51 Came To Be
All the bubblegum designs, artist collabs and down-with-the-kids marketing aside, folks forget how radical the Swatch watch continues to be. Far from becoming just another trendy fad from the 80s, Swatch was conceived in reaction to a severe (in the watch world, a minimum of) catastrophe: from the early’70s onwards, handmade mechanical watches appeared to be threatened with obsolescence by cheap, mass-produced granite watches hanging in the Far East. Even James Bond had discarded his Rolex for any Seiko digital.
In stark contrast to the pouting, Swatch-toting teenie boppers on the cover of Smash Hits, it required a short, bearded, instead plump engineering consultant called Nicolas G. Hayek to show the fortunes of Swiss watchmaking around.
The bail-out banks asked Hayek, who spent 300 million Swiss francs of his cash, afterward, as president, dragged SMH kicking and screaming into the modern era with manufacturing lines, machination, and one daring, desperate movement: the Swatch watch.
An earlier Swatch advertisement from the’80s
It had been invented almost by accident. An SMH engineer called Elmar Mock had recklessly spent 500,000 francs on an injection molding machine at the same year the company had made 4,000 staff redundant. When his boss found out, he had two hours to come up with a proposition: a cheap quartz watch that utilized ultrasonic welding to create the mechanism directly into the circumstance. No screws, watertight, with only 51 parts, and very little else to go wrong.

Fortunately for Mock, SMH was already looking for an inexpensive new product, so — appropriately chastened — he was given only six months to bring his’Swatch’ to advertise.
Hayek pitched it perfectly to take advantage of an era defined by disposable earnings and elegance over content. The normal Swatch owner used their collection as a psychological statement to suit whatever their mood took them on a particular moment. Today you can keep the dad’s Omega or mommy’s Cartier safely locked out for special occasions and, for regular use, just throw in your’second view’ (really the origin of this title, maybe not’Swiss watch‘ since many presume ).