I'll try to keep it short, not sure I'll succeed.
So Cato the Elder must have been right on some points: repetitively say what you feel you are absolutely right about:
I understand and do not want to speak against the thing, that lots of our Forum-mates need larger and larger watches, I myself also think that the SA, the Navi World, the Skyland, the SOHC are beautiful watches. But I do not think I'd ever wear them because they are out of my taste for things for myself and a thin-to-normal wrist of mine (6.75") is a prohibitive size in my eyes.
So:
I think that Breitling, manufacturer of many wonderful watches should ALSO think of us normal size or conservative style watch wearers and collectors.
I'm the happy and proud owner of 4 Lings, sizes between 39 and 42 mm and my daily wearer is the Chrono Cockpit (on Pilot) which is a very, very harmonic piece for me, simply don't feel having it on my wrist and matches my style of clothing. The blue-dialled CSO (my week-end and holiday wearer) is on the upper limit regarding diameter, but I find sometimes the 17.5 (!) mm height too much. The beautiful off-white dial Grand Premier is my suit and evening occasions (opera, theater, etc.) wearer on a leather strap.
The blue Aviastar is a rare guest on my wrist - mineral crystal and 30 m wr are against regular weekday usage - I simply love how the Aviastar looks and wear it sometimes.
So I think that I can wear anything between 36 and 43 mm (I loved to wear my late Tudor Oyster Prince Date+Day which is the same diameter and style than the Datejust).
I'd be happy to buy further Lings (+ hope I'll find a nice black dialled used Grand Premier some time). No real further models for me in the current collection, though I love the style of many.
I think that every - or almost every - model using the 7750 should also be offered as a day-date version too (Chronomats, Chrono Cockpit, SOHC). Some people do not work, some are on holidays, some - like me - are working on a different schedule every weekday so this is a valuable feature and the 7750 has this feature (if not hidden by the dial) and BTW makes the dial a bit more harmonic too.
I think that the important models should all be offered as dark-only dials too (all black, all blue, all grey or black-eye blue), because now the reading-at-a-glance of my CSO and CC are impaired by the strongly contrasting dials (blue with silver sub-dials). The new fashion of the black-and-blue (blackeye blue) dials is absolutely according to my personal preference, I hope the CSO will also come with blackeye blue dial, hopefully in 2010. For a better visibility any light dial (white, off-white, silver, cream) should be made with blued hands and hour markings too - here the matching Fortis B-42-s are to be overtaken. Dark dials should use at least white small chrono-hands instead of silver. At the age of 49 with otherwise good eyes I have problems to read e. g. the silver hands and chrono counters of the CSO above the silver sub-dials. The 3 small hands of my CC were replaced by blued hands - way better since then.
I think that many love the 0-60 count-up lunette so every turning lunette should have (at least as an option) this feature, not only the count-down lunette.
I think that some - repeatedly used - dial gags are not really popular, because not too useful. Now I mean 3 different things:
0-100 decimal scale on the rehaut of many models.
Windrose on turning lunettes.
13-24 hour digits on some models (e. g. SO).
These 3 should be used a bit more rarely, or at least watches without these should also be offered as an option.
I'd be very much interested (that is I'll buy them if they happen to appear) in a few models, as follows:
- Chronomat B01 blackeye blue dial, but:
if possible:
40-42 mm, as written above.
Without an oblique date window, that is: either perpendicular digits between 4 and 5, thinking of people wearing their watches on the right wrist, or date window placed to 6 o'clock, like on some of the previous Seamaster Chronos or some newer Tudor chronos. Or Big Date at 12.
With a weekday feature, best at 6, shown by a hand, common axis with the hour counter, or a simple full calendar module, using day and month windows at 12 and date hand from the center - like the Venus 191 or Valjoux 72C driven original Datoras or the 7751 driven new Datoras. Rehaut tachy scale, horizontal part date digits, decimal scale to be forgotten. Classic dial in modern case - clearly winner.
With the older fonts on the lunette. Rider tabs using the new design w/o the pulli-killers but having edges showing to the center and not parallel like the 2009 B01. Sloping lunette can be kept.
The B01 too has its way up with some features other high-end manufacturers use: Breguet spring, bridge for the balance, direct adjusting on the balance wheel by screws, maybe a Fly-back feature (pilot's watches!!!). These could make a wonderful movement even more refined, with an even better place among the chrono movements of Patek, Rolex, AP, Lange, JLC and a few others. I do not think these would cost disproportionately too much, but would gain a lot on the other side.
- SOHC in a "normal" size, say 40-42 mm and day-date 7750. A pilot-style bracelet option would be nice.
-Chrono Cockpit (39mm!), either with the 7750 or the B01 but with day-date feature and screw-down pushers.
Three more comments on the bracelets:
The bracelet design of the Pro I. and the Fighter should not have been dropped completely: they offer a much more 3-dimensional feeling, against the 2-dimensional feeling of the Navi-Pilot-ProII. line, which is good in case of thick watches, like my CSO (I have for my CSO the ProI., the ProII., the Ocean Classic, the Ocean Racer, a blue shark and a NATO - and I use practically only the ProI.)
The Navi-Pilot-ProII. line (which - as a design - is one of the nicest bracelets out there) should have, at least as an option:
1. a double pusher folding clasp, like that of the Ocan Racer
2. divers extension links: I really cannot understand producing bracelets for watches between 100 and 3000.... m wr without a divers extension.... why? If there would be an easy-changing system (like on certain Cartier, the IWC AT, or the newest Panerai) I'd more-or-less understand, but without this??? I'm a bracelet guy and I'm more than hurt that the extension piece is not an option now - they even stopped it on the Aeromarine line, where the ProI. used to have this feature. This is the other point why I use the ProI. on my CSO. I do not regularly dive but regularly go for XC-skiing, nordic-walking or simply walking in gloves in wintertime and want to wear my waterproof watches on the outside. (The Ocean Classic would of course gain too by this new folding clasp mechanism, a Ling fanatic has already applied the OR clasp on the OC bracelet (w/o divers link of course), there is a long post w/scans on the Watchlounge Ling Forum):
http://www.watchlounge.com/wbb3/wl/watc ... ost1264357Sorry guys for I could not keep my post short and excuse me those who got tired reading all my thoughts. I hope competent persons from Breitling also read such posts and if they agree on some points then these can go into production some time. If not, then I'm very, very happy with my 4 Lings (the 5th, pre-loved from year 1999 to join some day) and have plenty of time to wait "my turn".
Looking forward to Basel 2010, with best regards from your friend in Budapest:
Robertus