Grand Seiko Spring Drive Titanium / Black / Bracelet ref SBGA349

Grand Seiko · Spring Drive

Spring Drive Titanium / Black / Bracelet

SBGA349
TitaniumBlackSpring Drive40.5mm100m

Case

Diameter

40.50 mm

Height

12.90 mm

Material

Titanium

Glass

Sapphire

Caseback

Open

Water Resistance

100.00 m

Dial

Color

Black

Indexes

Stick / Dot

Hands

Dauphine

Finish

Guilloche

Shape

Round

Other

Gender

M

Production

2017–present

Movement Specs

Caliber

9R65

Grand Seiko in-house

Caliber Brand

Grand Seiko

Type

Spring Drive

Power Reserve

72 h

3 days

Jewels

30

Complications

Date, Hours, Minutes, Seconds, Power Reserve Indicator

About the Movement

9R65 movement

Caliber 9R65 is a self-winding movement based on Seiko's Spring Drive technology. It is currently the most standard of the 9R Spring Drive movements, and is used in many Grand Seiko models. Spring Drive, one of the great innovations in modern watch making history, regulates a spring-driven movement with state-of-the-art electronic technology that functions without batteries or other external power source. Its sole power source is a mainspring, which drives a series of gears. A rotor, connected to the end of these gears, generates a small electrical charge that activates an electronic circuit and quartz oscillator. Its accuracy is unprecedented for a watch wound by a mainspring. The development of the 9R Spring Drive movement was possible only because Grand Seiko is one of the few manufacturers with expertise in both mechanical and electronic watches.

About the Family

Spring Drive is Grand Seiko's most original contribution to watchmaking — a movement technology that exists nowhere else in the industry. Invented by Yoshikazu Akahane and developed over 28 years before its 1999 debut, Spring Drive combines a traditional mainspring with an electronic regulator: the mainspring drives the gear train, but instead of a mechanical escapement, a tri-synchro regulator converts the mechanical energy into electrical energy to drive a quartz oscillator that governs the speed of the hands. The result is a perfectly smooth, gliding seconds hand — no tick, no sweep — and accuracy of ±1 second per day, an order of magnitude better than mechanical movements. It is simultaneously mechanical and electronic, and entirely neither.

About this reference

The Grand Seiko SBGA349 was introduced in 2017, when Grand Seiko became a brand of its own rather than a collection within the larger Seiko family. It features a titanium case and matching bracelet. The black dial has a vertical striped pattern.