Omega 8900: Difference between revisions
meta>Stephen Foskett Created page with "'''Calibre 8900''' is the first of a family of automatic Co-Axial watch movements from Omega. It will replace Cal. 8500. ==History== In 2007, O..." |
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Latest revision as of 15:17, 23 July 2021
Calibre 8900 is the first of a family of automatic Co-Axial watch movements from Omega. It will replace Cal. 8500.
History
In 2007, Omega introduced the first in-house Co-Axial movement family, Cal. 8500. This movement was redesigned and the new Cal. 8900 launched at BaselWorld in 2015. That movement was shortly joined by a family of new movements, with Omega making it known that this would replace the Cal. 8500 family. The luxury-finished Cal. 8901 was the first of Omega's movements to meet the METAS certification.
Cal. 8900 features two barrels in series, providing a power reserve of 60 hours. It uses a free-spring balance and silicon balance spring, making it resistant to magnetic fields up to 15,000 Gauss. Like its predecessor, it operates at 25,200 A/h rather than the more-common 28,800 A/h.
Variants
- Cal. 8900
- Cal. 8901 - Luxury finished
- Cal. 8902 - Luxury finished, annual calendar
- Cal. 8903 - Luxury finished, gold rotor and bridge, annual calendar
- Cal. 8906 - GMT
- Cal. 8912 - No date
- Cal. 8913 - Luxury finished, no date version
- Cal. 8922 - (2016) Annual calendar
- Cal. 8923 - Luxury finish, annual calendar
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