Tissot Gentleman Powermatic 80 Silicium
T127.407.11.091.01
- Diameter:40 mm
- Up to 80 hours power reserve
- 316L stainless steel case
- See-through caseback
- Swiss automatic movement
- Domed scratch-resistant sapphire crystal with antireflective coating
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Swiss made watches
Technical specificities
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Inspired by a Tissot timepiece of the 1960’s but especially designed for the active and modern man of today. The classic and elegant touch makes this watch suitable for any type of occasions. The Tissot Gentleman Powermatic 80 Silicium has an exhibition case back, allowing you to admire the Powermatic 80 movement using a silicon balance spring for greater longevity, heightened precision and resistance to magnetic fields. The movement boasts an impressive 80 hours power reserve when most automatic movements have a power reserve of around 40 hours. Lastly, the rotor is finely engraved with the Waves of decoration.
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Powermatic 80
An automatic watch is powered by the energy of the person who wears it. Wrist movement enables the mechanism to run. The Powermatic 80 movement boasts 80 hours of power reserve, which is enough to continue telling time accurately even if the watch is not worn for three days. It is an innovative movement that outperforms the competition, whose movements generally provide 1.5 days of power reserve*. *Non-contractual image
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Superluminova®
Ensuring visibility under all conditions is an important goal for Tissot. This is why some timepieces feature a material we call SuperLuminova®. This material is placed on visible parts such as dials and hands, where it functions as a miniature accumulator of reflected light when the watch finds itself in the dark*. *Non-contractual image
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Water resistance
All Tissot watch cases undergo several tests, including a water resistance check. Tissot tests the watch's ability to resist impacts and pressure, as well as the penetration of liquids, gas and dust by replicating the real-life conditions in which the watch may find itself*. *Non-contractual image
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Silicium
When electronic objects emerged in the 1930s, Tissot began harnessing its expertise to help its customers prevent interference between their watch movements and the magnetic fields generated by electronics. Nevertheless, magnetic fields continued to be a preoccupation for watchmakers. With the arrival of silicon as a new material to make components in the mechanism that controls a movement, Tissot can offer far greater resistance to the magnetic fields produced by everyday objects such as mobile phones, televisions, computers, hairdryers, radios or the magnetic closures on handbags. Thus, Tissot watches became even more accurate than before*. *Non-contractual image