April 23, 2024
Hublot Big Bang Magic Gold Watches

There is no real magic of this watch. If you buy one, do not expect it to give you the desire to make your broom dance, or inspire the girl / guy you’ve been ogling over the past few months to introduce ourselves. It is possible to do, however, is give you a little more confidence in the wrist, when you finally decided to take the first step (Nothing ventured, nothing gained). You may be fascinated by the dark tones of magic gold, or you may just feel dull. Whether its aesthetic final opinion, I think it is hard to scoff, resulting in the process of its creation. It almost did not alchemy, but it really is too cool.
Hublot Big Bang  Magic Gold Watches
When you want to market something as gold, it has to have at least 75% of its final weight made-up of gold. The other 25% can be whatever you like. If manufacturers want white gold, they might add a bit of silver to the mix; if they want red or pink gold, they would add different amounts of copper to change the color. Other additives, like nickel and zinc, go into forging the alloy to give the gold enough strength to stand up to daily wear. But traditional gold is still soft – really soft. It scratches, it dents, and, when it does, it’s really hard to reform it without permanently ruining the original shape. Hublot identified this problem and decided to do away with the traditional alloy materials and, instead, use boron carbide as the minority quantity in the 75/25 split.

Boron carbide is the second hardest material on Earth after Diamond. In its natural state, it looks like crushed pencil lead. While it’s in this state, Hublot takes it and pack it into a tube-shaped mold, before applying 2000 bar (yes, two thousand bar) of pressure to the powder. While in this compressed preform shape, the boron carbide is heated at 2200 degrees Celsius, fusing and neatly arranging the particles. When the preform comes out of the kiln, it looks like a toilet roll on steroids. It’s also weirdly light for its size and wall thickness (about 2cm). It transpires that the reason for its lightness is due to its porousness. I was shown an example of just how absorbent this material is at Hublot’s dedicated foundry in Nyon. When doused with water, the boron carbide preform appeared wet for a couple of seconds before the water disappeared as it might on a hot paving stone. At this point in the demonstration the reality of what was about to happen dawned on me, but didn’t detract from the first sighting of the finished product…

Hublot Big Bang  Magic Gold Watches
The next step of the process is to take a pre-shaped pure 24kt gold ingot (which has been molded under temperatures of 1100 degrees Celsius) and place it atop the boron carbide preform in the kiln. The two materials are then heated to 1400 degrees Celsius. At this temperature the gold is totally fluid and is forced under pressure into the pores of the boron carbide preform. When the composite is removed the gold simply seems to have disappeared. It’s not until you actually pick it up that you realise it is now one with the preform (at this stage the color is remarkably unchanged). The finished tube of Magic Gold weighs four times as much as the boron carbide preform. The two materials are bonded and form a sturdy partnership. So sturdy, in fact, the only thing that can be used to shape the material is diamond. Before that, however, the tube is sliced by an electrified wire, into slithers of Magic Gold that will be worked into bezels, case uppers, lowers, and backs. Deeper slices of Magic gold will be cut vertically to create the lug-piece that connects the two lugs and carries Hublot’s new strap release system.

As well as sporting a resilient exterior, the Hublot Big Bang Unico Full Magic Gold features an in-house self-winding HUB 1241 UNICO column wheel chronograph movement with the double clutch visible on the dial side. The watch has a power reserve of 72 hours, a water resistance of 100 meters, and an easily removable strap that can be detached by the simple press of a button located between the lugs and changed for one of Hublot’s many other strap options that can be purchased separately. The  Hublot Big  Bang Unico Full Magic Gold is 45mm wide, has anti-reflective front and back sapphire crystals, small seconds sub-dial at 9 o’clock, and a chronograph minute counter and date at 3 o’clock. The date is a personal highlight of this watch for me: I love Hublot’s habit of skeletonizing their date wheels, and although this is not the best of clearest example of the stylistic quirk I’ve seen (I prefer the date ring to be black for clarity against a pale background), it’s still awesome.

The Hublot Big Bang Tourbillon 5-day Power reserve Indicator Full Magic Gold is also 45mm but is only water resistant to 30 meters as is the norm for Hublot’s complicated watches. This hand-wound movement displays its remaining energy by way of a sub-dial at 9 o’clock. The power reserve of this watch is an excellent 115 hours. The calibre HUB 6016 is skeletonized and visible through the front and back sapphire crystals, both of which treated with an anti-reflective coating. The tourbillon beats away at 6 o’clock enlivening an excellently restrained color palette, which seems vintage and cutting-edge at the same time to me. There’s a kind of bleak futurism about these pieces, which I think is great, but appreciate it won’t be to everyone’s taste. That figures to be of little consequence to Hublot as both pieces are limited. The Hublot Big Bang Unico Full Magic Gold is restricted to 250 pieces worldwide and the The Hublot Big Bang Tourbillon 5-day Power reserve Indicator Full Magic Gold is limited to just 50 pieces in total. The price of the Hublot Big Bang Unico Full Magic Gold will be $36,700, and the Hublot Big Bang Tourbillon 5-day Power reserve Indicator Full Magic Gold will have a price of $110,000. hublot.com