434,888 listings including promoted listings
Sort by
Promoted
Rolex Yacht-Master II
Certified
116681
£18,750
Free shipping
Promoted
Omega Seamaster Railmaster
Certified
35.004-63 Radium Dial 1963 Antimagnetic
£7,127
+ £132 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Yacht-Master 40
Black Dial - 2022 - 126621
£13,600
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
A. Lange & Söhne Saxonia
Box/Papers 2023 | Absolutely stunning on the wrist | Super Minty hardly worn
£21,094
+ £148 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Datejust 41
Certified
Steel Grey Index Dial Mens Oyster Watch Complete 126300
£8,078
+ £82 for shipping
Popular
Rolex Datejust 36
Blue Enamel Boiler Gauge Dial
£6,884
+ £164 for shipping
Popular
Tudor Black Bay 54
M79000N 37mm July 2023
£3,295
+ £39 for shipping
Popular
Tudor Black Bay Fifty-Eight
Certified
79030N - Box & Papers - 24-Month Warranty - 2019
£2,450
+ £30 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Oyster Perpetual 41
Blue Dial Unworn 2023 Box And Papers 124300
£7,550
Free shipping
Popular
Rolex Day-Date 36
ROSE GOLD FULL SET
£11,541
+ £106 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Submariner Date
40mm Green Dial Hulk 116610LV
£16,405
+ £82 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Submariner Date
Hulk 2019 Green Dial Box And Papers 116610LV
£16,995
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Oyster Perpetual 39
Box/Papers 2019 Amazing Collectors Piece | Reduced for Quick Sale Price Firm
£7,321
+ £148 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex GMT-Master II
126710BLNR 40mm Stainless Steel Batgirl Box Papers New 2023
£14,838
+ £82 for shipping
Promoted
A. Lange & Söhne Odysseus
Certified
White Gold
£41,950
+ £50 for shipping
Popular
Omega Genève
Automatico 166.041
£529
Excl. shipping
Private Seller
Popular
Rolex Daytona
Certified
116500LN White Dial - Box & Papers - 24-Month Warranty - 2017
£23,495
+ £30 for shipping
Popular
Rolex Daytona
Certified
18kt White Gold - LIKE NEW
£31,500
+ £99 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Datejust 41
Certified
126333
£12,000
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Datejust 36
Certified
Stainless Steel Datejust 36 Factory Blue Vignette Diamond Dial Box And Papers 16234
£6,250
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Submariner Date
Certified
1998 Submariner Date Black Dial Mint Condition Box And Papers 16610
£7,650
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Explorer II
Certified
Steel 42 mm 216570 Box Papers 2017
£7,995
Free shipping
Promoted
Patek Philippe Nautilus
Certified
Ladies Stainless Steel Watch 7118/1A-010 Complete 2018
£44,517
+ £82 for shipping
Popular
Tudor Black Bay Fifty-Eight
79030N
£2,713
+ £412 for shipping
Promoted
Cartier Santos Galbée
2961
£2,500
Excl. shipping
Private Seller
Popular
Zenith Defy
Certified
Classic 49.9000.670/77.R782 Ceramic - Box & Papers - 24-Month Warranty - 2020
£5,250
+ £30 for shipping
Popular
Patek Philippe Calatrava
1960’s Patek Philippe ref. 3445G Calatrava 18k White Gold Blue Dial
£8,244
+ £82 for shipping
Rolex Daytona
116519LN
£32,000
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Submariner Date
Starbucks Kermit Green Bezel 2023 Unworn Box Papers 126610LV
£14,250
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Day-Date 36
Certified
18ct Yellow Gold Day-Date 36 Fully Loaded Diamonds Factory Black Dial 18238 Box And Papers
£15,995
Free shipping

Chrono24 Buyer Protection

The Safest Path to Your Dream Watch

More information

Popular
Rolex Submariner (No Date)
non date
£9,250
+ £50 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Daytona
Certified
Stainless Steel Yellow Gold Black Dial Mens Watch 116523
£14,426
+ £82 for shipping
Popular
Breitling Navitimer 1 B01 Chronograph
46mm Green Steel
£4,995
+ £25 for shipping
Popular
Citizen
Tsuyosa
£150
Excl. shipping
Private Seller
Rolex Daytona
Certified
116520 White Dial - Box & Papers - 24-Month Warranty - 2006
£18,495
+ £30 for shipping
Rolex Sea-Dweller
1980 Sea-Dweller ref. 1665 “Great White” Cream Patina Papers
£15,540
+ £82 for shipping
Popular
Rolex GMT-Master II
Certified
126710BLNR
£13,250
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Sea-Dweller Deepsea
James Cameron 2023 Unworn 136660 Box And Papers
£14,250
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Datejust 31
Certified
Ladies Datejust 31 68273 Factory Blue Vignette Diamond Dial Afterset Bezel Box Warranty
£6,350
Free shipping
Rolex Submariner Date
Certified
126610lv
£12,250
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex GMT-Master II
126720VTNR "Sprite" Left Hand Watch Jubilee Band Complete
£15,662
+ £82 for shipping
Promoted
Richard Mille RM 67
Certified
67-02
£249,500
+ £50 for shipping
Popular
Tudor Black Bay 41
M79540
£1,695
Excl. shipping
Private Seller
Rolex Oyster Perpetual 36
126000 Blue - Box & Papers - Rolex Warranty - 2024
£7,195
+ £30 for shipping
Popular
Rolex Day-Date 40
2020 UK same day delivery
£39,500
+ £43 for shipping
Rolex Daytona
Certified
116520
£17,000
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Datejust 41
Smooth Bezel Grey Rhodium Index Dial 2023 Oyster Bracelet Box And Papers
£8,650
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Day-Date 36
Certified
Gents 18ct Yellow Gold Day-Date 36 Factory Navy Blue Diamond Dial 18238 Box And Papers
£15,495
Free shipping
Popular
Rolex Daytona
Green Dial - NEW 2021 - FULL FACTORY STICKERS
£63,000
+ £99 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Yacht-Master 40
Certified
18K Rose Gold Oysterflex Watch 116655 Custom Bezel
£23,082
+ £82 for shipping
Popular
Grand Seiko Heritage Collection
Virtually-Unworn Never Polished Anniversary Edition
£5,194
+ £82 for shipping
Popular
Citizen
Automatic Day & Date 21-Jewels Japanese Men's Wrist Watch Ref : 8200
£35
Excl. shipping
Private Seller
Rolex Daytona
Certified
116500LN White Dial - Box & Papers - Rolex Warranty - 2022
£25,495
+ £30 for shipping
Rolex Air King
Certified
39mm 2022 Box & Paperwork
£5,965
+ £25 for shipping
Rolex GMT-Master II
Certified
126710BLNR
£14,000
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Sea-Dweller
Red Writing 43mm Unworn 2023 Box & Papers 126600
£11,850
Free shipping
Rolex Datejust 41
Certified
126334 Stainless Steel Diamond Dot Dial Oyster Bracelet
£11,500
+ £43 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Milgauss
Black Dial 116400GV Unworn 2023 Box And Papers
£10,150
Free shipping
Promoted
Rolex Daytona
116515LN Rose Gold Oysterflex Chocolate Dial Men's Watch 2023 New
£34,623
+ £82 for shipping
Rolex Submariner Date
Certified
Ref 126613LB "Bluesy" 2022 Full Set
£13,350
+ £39 for shipping
Seiko Spirit
SARB033
£370
Excl. shipping
Private Seller
Tudor Pelagos
Certified
FXD 25707B/22 Titanium - Box & Papers - Tudor Warranty - 2022
£3,195
+ £30 for shipping
Promoted
Rolex Daytona
Meteorite Dial (Serial White Tag | Clasp Stickers | Full Set | 2021)
£65,291
+ £164 for shipping

Mechanical Watches: Technical Masterpieces

The mechanical watch is one of humanity's most important cultural innovations. For centuries, watches have been keeping track of time. Today, there is a myriad of environmentally-friendly mechanical watches running precisely without a battery.


Highlights

  • Watchmaking art - a fine piece of craftsmanship on your wrist
  • Incredible variety: a watch for every budget and taste
  • No batteries required: manual and automatic calibers
  • Famous diving watches such as the Rolex Submariner
  • Inexpensive automatic watch: Tissot PRS 516

Mechanical Watches: A Cultural Revival

Watch lovers and collectors have been enthusiastically celebrating mechanical watches for decades. Wristwatches from Rolex or Patek Philippe are considered some of the most coveted luxury watches there are, and for good reason. Both manufacturers produce mechanical timepieces that are valuable and maintain their worth. Some vintage models and limited editions even increase in value over the years.

However, there was a time when mechanical watches had a difficult time surviving. With the rise of inexpensive quartz watches in the 1970s, many watch manufacturers found themselves in extreme hardship. Some brands were forced to quit and have since disappeared; today, they are only known by watch experts. Before the quartz boom, mechanical wristwatches and pocket watches were everyday items. If you wanted to know the current time, you needed a watch, and at that time, most had a mechanical movement. However, since quartz watches were less expensive than their mechanical siblings in the mid-1970s, quartz timepieces almost completely wiped mechanical ones off the map.

Mechanical watches experienced a comeback in the beginning of the 1980s, however. Watch lovers and collectors rediscovered the charm of a ticking mechanical movement, and felt able to accept deviations of seconds or minutes. However, it was really about the technology and precision engineering inside the watch. Since most manufacturers switched to making quartz watches, fans of mechanical watches had to find these timepieces at flea markets, auctions, and in leftover stock. In those days, it was easy to get a good bargain. That changed a few years later when the demand for old mechanical watches exceeded the supply. Traditional watch manufacturers noticed this change and began to offer mechanical watches in their collections once again. New brands and manufacturers also began to spring up in abundance, such as the German brand Nomos. Roland Schwertner founded this business in 1990, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Classic watchmaking has been experiencing a renaissance and a completely unexpected boom in sales. Wristwatches have transformed from a basic commodity to a status symbol for both men and women.


Introductory Mechanical Watches

There is an abundance of mechanical watches, from inexpensive pre-owned or new models to mid-priced new watches to exclusive pieces which can cost upwards of a million euros. You can find pre-owned vintage watches from brands such as Seiko for less than 100 euros . These watches are often in good condition and are an inexpensive introduction to the world of mechanical watches. You can also find new watches from Japanese manufacturers such as Citizen, Orient, and Seiko in the 100 - 200 euros price range. There are many manufacturers, such as Junkers or Zeppelin, that use Japanese movements from Miyota in their introductory models. Miyota is Citizen's caliber department.

Swiss mechanical watches are also available at inexpensive prices. A used, vintage Tissot watch costs between 100 and 400 euros. A new Tissot PRS 516 , one of their most famous and popular models, costs around 500 euros. A highlight in this collection is the Powermatic 80 variant, with an impressive 80-hour power reserve. It's available for around 700 euros; usually, watches with long power reserves cost a few thousand euros. With an added stopwatch function, a used PRS-516 costs around 1,000 euros. New watches from this series cost around 1,600 euros. Mechanical watches from Certina, Hamilton, or Longines are in a similar price range to Tissot's.


Luxury Mechanical Watches from Omega and Rolex

The Swiss watch manufacturer Omega has an excellent reputation in the watch industry. Their timepieces are defined by their innovative technology, appealing designs, and an excellent price-performance ratio. One of Omega's most popular models is the Speedmaster Professional Moonwatch. This chronograph was the first to reach the Moon. Pre-owned models in very good condition are available for around 2,500 euros. New, the Speedmaster Professional costs at least 3,000 euros. Special editions like the Silver Snoopy Award Limited Edition have doubled in value: originally, the watch cost 5,900 euros, while it now costs 12,000 euros new.

Rolex is probably the most famous watch brand worldwide. There's no other brand that stands for luxury and prestige like Rolex does. The Submariner and the Daytona are two of the most sought-after Rolex models. The bicolor Daytona is available pre-owned starting for around 8,500 euros. Pre-owned Daytonas made of stainless steel, however, cost at least 10,000 euros. New, the bicolor model costs 10,000 euros; a new stainless steel model costs around 14,000 euros. Stainless steel Rolex watches are especially in demand and thus maintain a more stable value. The Paul Newman Daytona is also quite popular. This model can be identified by its contrasting dial edges and subdials. The numbers on the dial are in an Art Deco style. Models with reference number 6239 are particularly rare. If they feature a Paul Newman design, these watches can easily cost over 100,000 euros.

The Rolex Submariner, one of the first diving watches ever produced, is available pre-owned for around 4,500 euros. New models without a date display and the distinctive date magnifier cost about 6,000 euros. With a date display, the Submariner costs around 7,000 euros. A vintage Submariner with reference number 1680 and red writing on the dial costs between 10,000 and 20,000 euros. It earned its nickname "Red Sub" thanks to its characteristic red text.


Manual Winding Mechanical Watches

Every mechanical movement has multiple gears. In each movement, the energy for the movement of the wheels comes from a specific storage. In large grandfather clocks, these are weights attached to chains, and the chains must be pulled in order to wind the movement. Pocket watches and wristwatches, on the other hand, have mainsprings which can be wound via a key or a crown. The potential energy stored in the wound mainspring is released to the train in a controlled fashion. Mainsprings were also what made it possible to downsize movements. Another pioneering invention was the concept of crown winding, which made easy-to-lose keys obsolete. One of the first pocket watches with crown winding came from Louis Audemars. The business introduced this watch feature in 1838. You can also set the hands using the crown.

A mechanical movement functions very simply in theory. The mainspring receives its energy via the crown, winding stem, and wheels of the winding system. In order to prevent the mainspring from suddenly unrolling, there's a small stopwork. The train reduces the high force of the mainspring. The train's transmission is calculated so precisely that the seconds wheel makes a full rotation every minute. The escapement is located at the end. It's comprised of a pallet and an escape wheel. The escapement prevents the train from going out of control, and it ensures the watch keeps running by forwarding tiny force pulses to the balance wheel. The balance wheel keeps the pace of the movement, oscillating back and forth. It's comprised of the balance rim and balance spring, which is the beating heart of every mechanical caliber. Without the balance spring, the balance wheel along with the entire movement would stop moving after a short time. Thus, the escapement and oscillation systems form the base of every mechanical watch.

The motion train is located under the dial. Generally, this reduces the center wheel's number of revolutions by one-twelfth. The center wheel makes one rotation on its own axis every 60 minutes. Thus, the hour hand makes one full rotation every 12 hours.

Several different manufacturers are still producing manual winding mechanical calibers, such as Junghans, Nomos, Patek Philippe, and Jaeger-LeCoultre.

Technical Details of Manual Winding Watches

  • Movement design allows for flat cases
  • Manual winding
  • Runs without a battery for up to 8 days

Automatic Mechanical Watches

The invention of automatic winding revolutionized the mechanical watch, as automatic watches wind themselves just by being worn. The regular morning ritual of winding your wristwatch ceased to exist. In order for the watch to automatically wind, a rotor is used. Thanks to the constant force of gravity, it's always being pulled towards the center of the Earth. When you move your arm up and down, the rotor rotates around in the case and winds the mainspring.

Winding occurs uni- or bidirectionally, depending on the movement. A bidirectional winding system has the advantage that the movement's winding rotor is wound to the right and to the left. A unidirectional winding system powers the movement by winding it in one direction. Therefore, it takes longer to fully wind the watch. The Pellaton winding system is an especially efficient winding system. It winds the movement bidirectionally, using small movements of the oscillating mass. The inventor of the Pellaton winding system was Albert Pellaton, the technical director at the International Watch Company from 1944 to 1966.

Both winding systems have a so-called reduction gear. This converts the fast movements of the rotor into slower ones with a higher torque. The end of the mainspring is not directly connected to the barrel. Rather, the end is connected to the so-called slipping spring so that the mainspring doesn't break off. When the movement is fully wound, the slipping spring slides along the inner wall of the barrel.

Mechanical watches with an automatic caliber have many advantages to offer. For one, they're convenient, as they don't need to be wound by hand. They also don't require batteries to run, making them generally more environmentally friendly than quartz watches. Generally, automatic movements are also more precise than manual movements, as the oscillating mass provides constant tension to the mainspring. That involves constant torque, which positively affects the amplitude. Amplitude is a term referring to the degree of rotation the balance wheel moves per oscillation.

Amongst watchmakers, the in-house, automatic Rolex calibers are considered some of the best, most robust, and most precise movements in existence.

Technical Details of Automatic Watches

  • Wind automatically while being worn
  • Often more precise than manual winding watches
  • Environmentally friendly: no battery

Mechanical Watches with Special Complications

Most mechanical watches limit themselves to displaying the time and the date. Automatic winding is one of the most common complications utilized in watches. A complication is a function of a mechanical movement that goes beyond displaying the hours, minutes, and seconds. Watchmakers also differentiate between small and large complications. Small complications are, for example, date or day of the week displays or power reserve indicators. A diving watch's rotatable bezel, moon phase display, or a GMT watch's second time zone are also small complications. Complications like minute repetition, perpetual calendars, and large and small striking works are considered large complications . A stopwatch function is also a large complication. In comparison to a perpetual calendar, a stopwatch function is similarly intricate, but more common and much less expensive.

The Swiss manufacturer Patek Philippe is known for their especially complicated watches. Their 1932 Graves Supercomplication pocket watch, as well as the Calibre 89 from 1989, are considered some of their most intricate pieces. The Graves Supercomplication, a special project for the New York banker Henry Graves, Jr., has an impressive 24 complications. Among these complications are a perpetual calendar, double chronograph to time intervening periods, and different astronomical displays. In 1989, the Calibre 89 replaced the Graves Supercomplication as the most complicated pocket watch in the world. The Calibre 89 has 33 different functions and remains one of the most complicated pocket watches in the world to date. It has a full perpetual calendar, a split-seconds chronograph, an indicator for the moon's age and phases, astronomical functions, a minute repeater, an alarm, and both a grande and petite sonnerie.

One of the most complicated wristwatches in the world is the Patek Philippe Grandmaster Chime with 20 complications. The timepiece has multiple acoustic complications, such as a minute repeater, petite sonnerie, grand sonnerie , an alarm with time strike, and a perpetual date repeater. The watch can also function as an alarm. It can even chime the time. Furthermore, it displays a second time zone, a perpetual calendar, power reserve indicators for the going train and strikework, a day and night display, and a moon phase display. The caliber 300 GS AL 36-750 QIS FUS IRM, which powers the Grandmaster Chime, is comprised of 1,366 pieces. The watch's red gold case is very finely chiseled, and in order to display all of the complications, the watch has a dial on the front and back side. Patek Philippe calls this "double face." There are only seven Grandmaster Chime watches in the world, one of which is located in the Patek Philippe Museum. This extravagant watch costs around 6.4 million euros.