Omega’s New Speedmaster Super Racing Has a Brand New Regulating System Allowing for Unheard of Accuracy
Today, Omega has unveiled a new Speedmaster that their social media team has been teasing aggressively for the past few weeks. They promised a ?tiny device? delivering a ?massive change,? and to that end the announcement today is really more about mechanics than a new watch. There is a new watch, of course, but to the extent that today?s news excites you, it will almost certainly be a result of a very small component that Omega has completely rethought.Â
The Speedmaster Super Racing is the first timepiece from Omega to feature what they?re calling ?Spirate? technology. Spirate is essentially a new method of movement regulation by way of a small knob connected to the balance that allows a watchmaker to adjust the rate in increments down to the tenth of a second. Omega claims that the end result is a movement that?s accurate to within 0/+2 seconds per day. Again, this is a mechanical movement that is, yes, METAS certified to be within two seconds per day. That?s Spring Drive level accuracy, without the benefit of quartz derived regulation. Assuming Spirate works as advertised (there?s no reason not to assume that given Omega?s proficiency in making highly accurate movements at a large scale) this is an enormously impressive accomplishment.Â
How does it work, exactly" Omega had to develop an entirely new silicon balance spring that can be adjusted for stiffness via a mechanism connected to the balance bridge (easily visible through the sapphire caseback...
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