Concord
For the outsider, precisely what watch lovers sometimes identify as innovation and are willing to talk about, image, and gush at length may appear to border on the absurd. Some complications, however, particularly the tourbillons, can make most look twice. Independent of their operation, they often times appear as works of micromechanical art, attractive fit and healthy and proportion, and rhythmic as a waltz or polka in their movement. One of the most spectacular of the past years may be in Swiss Replica Concord's C1 Gravity, whose movement was created with the horological virtuosi at BNB, now sad to say shut. The tourbillon is vertically situated alongside the case and the energy transferred across two axes on a trapeze comprised of securely strung metal wiring.
Together with the bridges, the whole mechanism appears to be a miniaturized spaceship. Concord Replica Watches has come a long way since its beginning in Biel, Switzerland, in 1908. They began by making high-end wristwatches for the American market, then developed ultraflat calibers that fit in gold coins. In 1970, Gedalio Grinberg bought the company and integrated it into his Us Watch Corporation (now MGI Luxury Group, including Movado and Ebel). It gained fame with hyper-thin quartz watches, the Delirium series, less than 1 mm tall. It then moved into sportive mechanical movements. For the past year or so Concord has reinvented itself as being a watch manufacturer for any real technophile.