In the 1950s, IWC introduced its first civilian anti-magnetic watch—dubbed the "Ingenieur" (Engineer)—catering to professionals whose work environments exposed them to strong magnetic fields, such as engineers, physicists, and doctors. This timepiece achieved its anti-magnetic properties by encasing the movement within a soft-iron inner cage situated between the movement and the outer case. In the late 1960s, a project was launched to develop an entirely new Ingenieur watch. The objective was to create a novel case design that would, on one hand, highlight the Ingenieur series' signature technical characteristics of robustness and durability, and on the other, break away from the heavy reliance on gold as a primary material. It was precisely for these reasons that IWC conceived the idea of utilizing stainless steel to craft a luxury sports watch.Best luxury replica watches price at Repwatcheaprice, cheap watches for men and women.
Given the task of designing a completely new timepiece, IWC naturally sought out a familiar and highly capable designer. Thus, in the early 1970s, IWC once again turned to Mr. Gérald Genta—with whom they had previously collaborated—and commissioned him to design the new Ingenieur watch. After four years of development, the all-new Ingenieur SL (Reference 1832) was successfully released in 1976. In addition to featuring a screw-down bezel with five distinct recesses, this new timepiece boasted a truly visionary characteristic: an integrated case-and-bracelet design—a style that virtually all sports watches today strive to emulate. While this integrated aesthetic undoubtedly lends the watch a more robust appearance and a greater sense of visual cohesion, it also presents a critical inherent challenge: achieving a truly comfortable fit with such a design is notoriously difficult. Although IWC subsequently released numerous Ingenieur models featuring the integrated case-and-bracelet design following the SL, the level of wearing comfort often left something to be desired.
However, the most significant improvement found in the *new* Ingenieur lies in its vastly enhanced wearing comfort. The new model achieves this by increasing the spacing between the bezel and the lugs, thereby widening the overall lug-to-lug span. This design ensures that the integrated lugs can feature a more pronounced curvature, while the dual-axis link connection system between the bracelet and the lugs grants the bracelet a much greater degree of flexibility. Through my extensive hands-on experience with the new Ingenieur over the past two years, I have come to a profound realization: among all integrated-bracelet sports watches, this is the *only* one that can truly rival the comfort of the Patek Philippe Nautilus—and indeed, when compared to a Rolex Datejust fitted with a five-link Jubilee bracelet, it arguably surpasses it in terms of comfort. Of course, another major contributor to the exceptional comfort of the all-new Ingenieur is the Calibre 32111—a movement measuring a mere 4.2 millimeters in thickness and boasting a power reserve of 120 hours. This slimmer movement ultimately enabled the new Ingenieur’s overall case thickness to be successfully kept to just 10.8 millimeters.