Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website The big bang Unico case now features sapphire in an array of colours
march 22, 2017 - Hublot

The big bang Unico case now features sapphire in an array of colours

For #hublot, it seems there are no limits when it comes to colour. Its application brings depth and distinction to materials. #hublot has now fused sapphire and metals to create a Big Bang case in blue sapphire — marking the first time this colour sapphire has been used in watchmaking. The Big Bang Unico Sapphire made its name in 2016 as part of the sapphire revolution. A year on from this world’s first, the Nyon-based manufacture is celebrating another in the context of its tireless pursuit of innovation and R&D.
"At #hublot, we are driven by this competitive spirit and a desire to constantly surpass ourselves. Our ambitions often seem crazy yet, ultimately, 'wisdom is to have dreams big enough not to lose sight when we pursue them'1. Our teams think in terms of solutions rather than problems. We see limits and difficulties as unique opportunities to surpass ourselves. That's the pioneer spirit - the #hublot spirit!"
Ricardo Guadalupe, CEO, Hublot
Act I – 2016, the year in which #hublot revolutionised sapphire usage in watchmaking
In a tour de force, #hublot cut a sapphire case on an unprecedented scale, mastering a complex material, which is both ultra-resistant and totally "invisible" thanks to its transparency. The Nyon-based watch manufacture and its Metallurgy department are constantly innovating and breaking new ground, with the rewards for its pioneering spirit revealed in 2017.
Act II – 2017
New innovation – #hublot continues the sapphire revolution
While coloured synthetic sapphires have been in existence since 1902, when they were invented by the French chemist Auguste Victor Louis Verneuil, melting sapphire is a complex and unpredictable process. Because its crystallisation process is unstable, it is difficult to obtain similarly coloured sapphires, even if they are produced simultaneously. Furthermore, bubbles and cracks can appear in the material, making the end result unsuitable for producing Big Bang cases. But the main challenge is in the size. Thus far, no coloured sapphires exceeding 2 kg have been produced. However, #hublot has now gone beyond this threshold. By pushing the limits of engineering and chemistry, it has developed a sophisticated and costly process that has resulted in the successful production of a large, transparent sapphire of perfectly uniform colour. #hublot heats aluminium oxide (Al2O3) — the raw material for sapphire — with a transition metal, chromium (Cr), at a temperature of between 2000 and 2050 degrees Celsius. The result is a coloured sapphire that retains all the original properties of a material which is ultra-scratch resistant, completely transparent and among the hardest in existence. The innovation extends to the colour — the first blue sapphire in the history of watchmaking.
Big Bang Unico Sapphire – Limited edition of 250 pieces
Case middle, bezel and case back cut from blocks of blue coloured sapphire. Flange, indices, Arabic numerals and hour/minute hands toned to match the colour of the sapphire, through contrast revealing the mechanism of the Unico HUB124 proprietary movement and its column wheel on the dial side. #hublot has also designed a series of 250 pieces in red sapphire by melting iron (Fe) with aluminium oxide.