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IWC Portuguese Automatic Ref. IW500109

$7,195

Pre-Owned IWC 42mm Portuguese Automatic, Black Dial, Black Leather Strap, Ref. IW500109

The IWC Portugieser is a luxury watch model that has its origins dating back to the late 1930s. The original design was created at the request of two Portuguese businessmen who wanted a watch with the precision of a marine chronometer. Since then, the Portugieser has evolved and become one of IWC’s most iconic and sought-after collections, known for its clean and elegant design, high-quality craftsmanship, and exceptional timekeeping accuracy.

The Portugieser may have been ahead of their time when released in the 1930s, but thanks to their size, slim feuille hands and railway track style chapter ring, they have lasted the test of time. The power reserve indicator tracks the 168 hours of power delivered from the caliber 51011 automatic movement, which is visible through the sapphire caseback.  Attached to a black crocodile leather strap, IWC has brought forward the beauty of a historical watch and given it modern reliability.  This pre-owned watch includes the original box and booklets.

 

Only 1 left in stock

Categories: , , SKU: 210000006260

Additional information

Band Color

Black

Band Material

Leather

Band Type

Strap

Bezel

Smooth

Box and Papers

Box and Papers

Brand

IWC

Caliber

51011

Case Material

Stainless Steel

Case Size

42mm

Caseback

Exhibition

Complication

Date, Small Seconds, Power Reserve

Crystal Material

Sapphire

Dial Color

Black

Movement

Automatic

Size

40mm – 42mm

Warranty

1-Year Watchworks Guarantee

Item ID0006260
Model #IW500109
Model NamePortuguese Automatic
Year Producedca. 2015
Serial Number38XXXXX

Description

What is in a name?  For IWC Schaffhausen, quite a bit.  While IWC is a Swiss watchmaker, the company retains the original name given it in 1868 by its American founder, the International Watch Company.  The 27-year-old manager of a leading watchmaker in Boston, Florentine Ariosto Jones envisioned the potential of combining Swiss watch making skills with American engineering and production.  He originally approached the region in Switzerland where most watchmakers were located, but they did not embrace his vision.  This may have been for the best, as an industrialist with watchmaking roots named Heinrich Moser had constructed a large dam on the river Rhine on the opposite side of Switzerland.  The young American’s vision of bringing modern manufacturing to the art of Swiss watchmaking found a receptive home in Moser’s town of Schaffhausen.  The International Watch Company also found a home.

For several years, F.A. Jones built factories and made watches, but he eventually returned to America, at which point the Rauschenbach family took control of IWC; they would run IWC successfully for four generations.  IWC was known for producing watch components for other watchmakers and had several innovations, but the Portugieser watch, for which IWC is known, arrived in 1939.   Aware of IWC’s reputation, it was the result of two Portuguese businessmen’s request to produce a large sized wristwatch for the navy that would be as accurate as a marine chronometer.  Soon after in 1940, IWC produced other large watches for German pilots, which at over 46mm became known as the Big Pilot’s watch.   When in 1944, IWC produced a wristwatch for the British Army, its reputation as a manufacturer of military watches was secure.

Later in 1950, IWC introduced its first in-house developed automatic movement, which they used to power their new Ingenieur watch introduced in 1955.  The Ingenieur was subsequently redesigned in 1976 by Gerald Genta, the famed designer of the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak.   When the world soon became smitten with undersea exploration, IWC contributed the Aquatimer dive watch in 1967 that was water-resistant to 200 meters and used a rotating time bezel under the crystal.

Committed to its founding principles of combining modern industrial engineering with the art of watchmaking, IWC has introduced several innovations over the years, including producing a split-seconds chronograph with a simpler and durable movement, and during the height of the demand for quartz watches, a mechanical perpetual calendar movement with moon phase.  IWC ownership has changed hands several times over its history and it has evolved with the changing world, but it remains what it has always been, the International Watch Company in Schaffhausen, combining modern technology with the art of Swiss watchmaking.