This story is part of the GP100, Gear Patrol's annual index of the 100 best products of the year. To see the full list of products or read this story in print, check out Gear Patrol Magazine: Issue Eight, available now at the Gear Patrol Store.

For much of the history of the wristwatch, it was possible to measure progress in decades. This year, however, we saw some truly game-changing timepieces. Some, like Ressence's e-Crown Concept, were technologically ground-breaking while others simply made inroads with respect to design and value — such as the Baume & Mercier Clifton Baumatic and Tudor Black Bay 58. Altogether, these watches are a refreshing testament to the fact that there are brands committed to pushing the envelope.

oris watch with a blue face and a light brown strap
Oris

Oris Big Crown Pointer Date

Oris's Big Crown Pointer Date has been a great timepiece for over 70 years, but a few smart 2018 updates offer buyers more choices than ever before. Its pastel-like dials stand out in an industry still riffing on monochromatic palettes, and options in case size (either 40mm or 36mm) make it approachable for men and women turned off by oversized watches. All of this, alongside its relatively low price, makes it a truly great value. — Andrew Connor

  • Case Diameter: 36mm or 40mm
  • Winding: Automatic
  • Power Reserve: 38 hours

    Learn More: Here Buy Now: $1,450+


    Baume & Mercier Clifton Baumatic

    baume  mercier watch with a blue crocodile strap
    Baume & Mercier

    Until this year, the Richemont Group, one of the world’s most powerful watchmaking conglomerates, did not offer an affordable watch that featured silicon, a material known to increase a watch movement’s accuracy. The Baume & Mercier Clifton Baumatic remedied that situation with flying colors, and also included a five-day power reserve. With a sub-$3,000 MSRP, it represents some serious value for money and hopefully a glimpse of things to come at Richemont. — AC

    • Case Diameter: 40mm
    • Winding: Automatic
    • Power Reserve: 120 hours

      Buy Now: $2,990

      black ressence watch laying on its side
      Chandler Bondurant

      Ressence e-Crown Concept

      Ressence is a brand built on the idea that you can embrace mechanical watchmaking and simultaneously buck tradition. The company's method of displaying time on a dial made up of mechanically-driven orbiting discs was already ahead of its time when the brand was founded in 2010, but what Ressence showed off at the 2018 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie (SIHH) — one of the watch world's biggest shows — was both unprecedented and unexpected.

      the core components of the ressence e crown
      The core components of the Ressence e-Crown.
      Ressence

      In short, Ressence's e-Crown concept introduced the possibility of a cybernetic timepiece of sorts, one that runs and functions on mechanical power but is augmented with electronic components. Like all other Ressence watches, the e-Crown Concept has a standard mechanical movement, but it also utilizes Ressence's 87-component electro-mechanical module. This module allows the timepiece to reset itself to the correct time if it hasn't been running for a while.

      Ressence is a brand built on the idea that you can embrace mechanical watchmaking and simultaneously buck tradition.

      This module doesn't rely on outside time signals, either, like some quartz watches equipped with GPS or atomic timekeeping. You set the watch as you normally would, then the module uses this as a reference and monitors its own performance and activity to self-regulate. If you haven't been wearing the e-Crown and it's been sitting unwound, you simply pick it up, tap the crystal and it'll adjust to the right time. The watch can also connect to your phone via Bluetooth, which means it can feed off your smartphone's clock to adjust time zones when traveling.

      What's more, this system doesn't rely on a battery that needs to be replaced or plugged in for charging. It uses so little energy that it can be sufficiently charged by discreet solar panels exposed by shutters that open automatically in the dial. The radical design language notwithstanding, there's almost no reason to believe this Ressence is anything other than a mechanical watch. And though the project remains a concept for now, Ressence has stated intentions to bring it into production in January of 2019.

      The genius of the e-Crown concept is not simply that it marries electronic and mechanical elements into a single watch, but that it does so simply to improve the actual mechanical timekeeping and not to add some secondary and superfluous function. In this sense, this is one of the few instances in which one can truly observe the historical art of mechanical watchmaking evolve. — AC

      • Case Diameter: 45mm
      • Winding: Automatic
      • Case Material: Titanium

        Learn More: Here


        Montblanc Geosphere 1858

        a montblanc watch with a blue face and brown leather strap
        Montblanc

        World timers, which show the time in multiple cities, aren't particularly common — and when they're used, it's often for exorbitantly expensive pieces whose designs lean classic. Montblanc's 1858 Geosphere changed that this year by offering the complication in a unique configuration — shown on two hemisphere displays — for a comparatively reasonable $5,600. The handsome design looks almost like a dive watch, making it significantly more wearable than pricier alternatives. — AC

        • Case Diameter: 42mm
        • Power Reserve: 42 Hours
        • Winding: Automatic

          Buy Now: $5,600


          Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical

          a hamilton watch laying flat on a wooden surface
          Hamilton

          Hamilton drew on its long history crafting tool watches for the U.S. military in designing the Khaki Field Mechanical, a hand-wound piece with a matte stainless steel case that clocks in at a perfect 38mm wide by 9.5mm tall. A simple time-only watch with luminescent hands and indices that ships on a Nato strap, the Khaki Field Mechanical is the essence of the military watch: simple, reliable and tough as nails. — Oren Hartov

          • Case Diameter: 38mm
          • Power Reserve: 46 hours
          • Winding: Manual

            Learn More: Here Buy Now: $500

            Gear Patrol

            Rolex GMT-Master II 126710BLRO

            rolex gmt pepsi bezel watch with a silver bracelet
            Henry Phillips

            As far as popular watches go, a Rolex has become the ultimate status symbol. But the debate over which particular Rolex model is the crème-de-la-crème rages on. Generally, it boils down to the "big three": the iconic Submariner dive watch; the sexy Cosmograph Daytona chronograph; and the ultimate traveler's companion, the GMT Master.

            If you're going to bat for the last of this trio — and many watch lovers do — there's little doubt as to which version you're picking: it's nicknamed the "Pepsi," and it's the legend of the Rolex world. If you don't know watches, you might snicker at the soft drink-inspired association, but there's something deeper going on here. Which is why, when Rolex announced a new Pepsi-bezel GMT Master II in Oystersteel (their proprietary blend of stainless steel) at this year's Baselworld, people freaked out.

            deconstructed pieces of a rolex watch
            Joël von Allmen

            It's useful to note that Rolex is one of the best companies in the world at what it does, which is, first and foremost, building a luxury brand. Rolex's representatives declined to provide comment for this story, and in fact, they decline to be interviewed for almost every story written about them, because it is their official policy not to give interviews. And why should they? It's better for them this way. This is a company that's batting a thousand on watch designs, and whose dominance of the competitive world of high-end watches is unquestionable. They are steeped in legend and myth, and if they spoke freely, those legends and myths would dissipate. (There's even a rumor that they are owned by the Vatican, which is, of course, absolute bunk… we think.)

            So we begin, as many Rolex stories do, with a story that has since become horological legend. In the early 1950s, Pan American Airlines needed someone to make a watch for their pilots, and they hired Rolex, which produced the first GMT Master, reference 6542, in 1954. The 6542 included a rotating 24-hour bezel which, when used in conjunction with the watch's fourth hand, the 24-hour indicator, allowed the user to read the time in a second time zone.

            In order to tell the difference between day and night on the 24-hour bezel, Rolex colored its bottom half red and its top half blue. Then, at some point, someone decided to start calling the watch the Pepsi, because its blue-and-red color scheme resembled the soda's logo, and this person established a powerful precedent.

            "One of the first Rolexes with a nickname was the GMT."

            "Almost every Rolex today has a nickname," says Steve Kivel, who runs Grand Central Watch, a certified Rolex repair shop in New York's Grand Central Station. "But one of the first Rolexes with a nickname was the GMT." The nicknames themselves are notable for vacillating between superheroes, sodas and various badasses. To wit: the “Coke” (GMT Master II in black and red), the “Root Beer” (GMT Master II in brown and gold), the “Batman” (GMT Master II in blue and black), the “Kermit” (Submariner with black dial and green bezel), the “Hulk” (a larger Submariner with green bezel and dial), the “Great White” (Sea Dweller with white text), the “Smurf” (a Submariner in all blue and white), the “President” (gold day-date worn by Churchill, Eisenhower and others), the “James Bond” (Submariner 6538, famously worn on a NATO strap that didn't fit correctly), and the “Paul Newman” (Daytona worn by… Paul Newman). Another legend with little actual evidence: a white-dial GMT Master supposedly made for Pan Am executives in the late 1950s.

            close up of the side of a rolex watch
            Alain Costa

            That famous Pepsi bezel was quickly upgraded from Bakelite (it cracked) to aluminum in 1956. In 1959, the company added a new movement, the caliber 1565, and dubbed this reference the 1675. And this is the way the GMT Master stayed all the way until 1980, making the 1675 the longest-running Rolex reference (though it received several small tweaks during this time). Che Guevara is believed to have been wearing one when he was captured and executed in Bolivia. Pablo Picasso wore one, and so did many very cool American astronauts (most likely because they had been pilots before becoming space cowboys). There were other bezel color schemes along the way, but the Pepsi remained choice. All of this iconic wearing had a simple result: the Pepsi became known for being cool as hell.

            Che Guevara is believed to have been wearing one when he was captured and executed in Bolivia.

            The modern era of the watch began in the '80s with the first discontinuation of the Pepsi bezel; the GMT Master II was produced between 1984 and 1989 in red and black. This color monopoly didn't last, and the Pepsi scheme reappeared again on the GMT Master II in 1989. Then, in 2007, Rolex once again discontinued the colorway, the official reason being that the new bezel material, ceramic, made the two-tone blue-and-red colorway impossible to manufacture.

            The company did release a version (the Rolex GMT Master II SARU) that used rubies and sapphires in place of the red and blue on the bezel — Sylvester Stallone bought one, but they weren't for everyone. Then, in 2013, Rolex released the two-tone blue-and-black Batman colorway, but the public was clamoring for a return to Pepsi.

            "People were yearning for them, badly," says Paul Aliteri of Bob's Watches. "And then they did bring it back in 2014 — but in white gold. Everyone kind of said, ‘Awwwwww. Thirty-eight thousand dollars is a lot of money.’ Ever since then, the Rolex world has been waiting for it to come back."

            Hence the audible gasps from the watch world when Rolex released the Rolex GMT Master II 126710 BLRO Pepsi Bezel in Oystersteel at the 2018 Baselworld trade show. "Here it was at long last," wrote Jack Forster for Hodinkee. "The Pepsi GMT in its purest form, in steel, as God and Hans Wilsdorf (the founder of Rolex) intended." (Cool but less notable were the other two new versions, in Everose gold and Everose gold and steel — they were simply not red and blue enough for most.)

            internal part of a rolex gmt watch
            The Rolex 3285 movement.
            Jean-Daniel Meyer

            The watch had a new movement — the caliber 3285, a few seconds more accurate per day — and a new bracelet — the five-piece link Jubilee — which was met with as much division as ever occurs among Rolex fans. It had the same old Pepsi bezel, and it promptly sold out. Rolex does not release specific data about its watch sales, though it's said that the overall number of watches manufactured per year is about 800,000. In any case, people clamored to get at the red-and-blue, but very few did. "With Nike, Apple, Tesla, if they misestimate demand, and don't have enough, it's no problem," Aliteri says. "Go and turn the presses on, make more! They're not gonna turn down customers. Rolex won't do that. They say, 'That's it. That's all we make.'"

            The wait list for the new Pepsi bezel in steel stretches several years, and the watch, which retails for $9,250, is now selling on the secondary market for as much as $22,000. The most the Batman — almost exactly the same watch, albeit in a different color scheme — ever went for at Aliteri's store was half of that, which seems to prove one thing:

            It's good to have legends, particularly in red and blue. — Chris Wright

            • Case Diameter: 40 mm
            • Winding: Automatic
            • Power Reserve: 70 hours

              Buy Now: $17,742+


              A. Lange & Söhne Triple Split

              a lange  sohne watch with a gray face and black crocodile strap
              A. Lange & Sohne

              At the end of World War II, Walter Lange returned from conscription in the German army to a family watch factory that had been blown to smithereens. Gone was everything that had come before: Walter's great-grandfather, Ferdinand A. Lange, had begun making watches in 1845, and, with the help of his two sons, A. Lange & Söhne had become one of the foremost watchmakers in Germany's Saxonia region.

              In 1948, Walter abandoned what was left of his family's business when he fled the Soviet occupation of East Germany. It was only after the fall of the Berlin Wall that Lange was able to return his family business to the forefront of high watchmaking. Since 1990, the brand has become the most respected watchmaker in Germany, beloved of aficionados and considered a benchmark of quality. Losing everything and fighting to regain it might have something to do with what A. Lange & Söhne is today: a company that does what few else in horology can or will do.

              internal parts of a a lange  sÖhne watch
              A. LANGE & SÖHNE

              The brand's latest is the A. Lange & Söhne Triple Split chronograph, a $147,000 watch that can record split times for up to 12 hours, mechanically. A rattrapante (also called a split-seconds complication) extends the functional range of a chronograph with a pair of seconds hands that can be stopped separately. This allows the simultaneous timing of, say, a sprinting race between two runners, or of a series of events, like the two consecutive laps of a single runner. But generally, the longest a standard rattrapante can time is 60 seconds.

              In 2004, Lange created the Double Split, the world's first double split-seconds complication, which could simultaneously record two intervals for up to 30 minutes by offering double chronograph minute hands. The Triple Split's additional rattrapante hands on both the minute and hour counters mean the wearer can time separate events lasting up to 12 hours: a Formula 1 race, perhaps, or a leg of the Tour de France.

              Of course, such a feat of timing can be accomplished by a mechanical watch that costs $147,000, but it can also be accomplished by a $10 Casio stopwatch, or the smartphone in your pocket.

              "It's the eternal discrepancy between reason and passion," says Anthony de Haas, Lange's director of product development. "A smartphone offers the same feature, and it can even stop time at an accuracy of a hundredth of a second, but it will never convey the same fascination and emotional satisfaction."

              two dials on the face of an a lange  sÖhne  watch
              A. LANGE & SÖHNE

              It's even more than that. The Triple Split exemplifies what Lange does best: create incredible mechanical machines that maintain precise timekeeping like no other watches have before; then make the individual pieces of those machines beautiful to behold; and then marry that mechanical wizardry to a dial and case that are striking in their elegant simplicity.

              At this point, Lange is beyond showing off for watch lovers — it's showing off for other watch companies. Because while other top-tier makers work on vertical integration or lengthening a power reserve, Lange accomplishes the horological equivalent of going to the moon. And then it does it again.

              So who truly needs a Triple Split? Only the devotees of a brand like A. Lange & Söhne, and others like them who choose passion over reason. — CW

              • Case Diameter: 43.2mm
              • Winding: Manual
              • Power Reserve: 55 hours

                Buy Now: $147,000+


                Vacheron Constantin FiftySix Collection

                vacheron constantin watch with a silver case and black leather strap
                Vacheron Constantin

                Access to Swiss luxury brand Vacheron Constantin has traditionally been a very expensive proposition, but the FiftySix Collection aims to change that with a time-only steel model that retails for under $12,000. The Day Date and the Complete Calendar models, available in steel or pink gold, up the ante in-house movements. Based on a reference released in 1956, the designs are classic Swiss elegance updated for the 21st century. — OH

                • Case Diameter: 40mm
                • Winding: Automatic
                • Features: Minutes, seconds, day, date, month, moonphase

                  Buy Now: $11,700+


                  Panerai Luminor Logo Collection

                  close up of a panerai luminor watch
                  Panerai

                  There are certain hallmarks that make a Panerai, well, a Panerai, and many of them are present on the Luminor Logo Collection models: oversized cushion cases, patented crown-protection devices and large luminous Arabic numerals. With a Luminor Logo, you also get the in-house P.6000 hand-wound movement and your choice of either a sub-seconds or a two-hand model, meaning these entry-level Luminors are just as handsome and durable as their more expensive Panerai siblings. — OH

                  • Case Diameter: 44mm
                  • Power Reserve: 72 Hours
                  • Winding: Manual

                    Buy Now: $4,000+

                    tudor black bay 58 watch with a silver case and bracelet
                    Henry Phillips

                    The Best New Watch of 2018: Tudor Black Bay 58

                    Designing a watch that pleases enthusiasts and seasoned collectors alike is a tough proposition, and more often than not, it's one that requires compromise. Not so for Tudor, which apparently felt up to the task when it made the Black Bay 58, a dive watch that marries modern technology with a vintage sensibility. Spend any time around it and you'll likely agree: it's anything but a concession.

                    Read the Full Story Buy Now: $4,450+


                    Presented by StockX

                    rolex watch laying on its side
                    Gear Patrol Studios

                    Rolex GMT-Master II (Root Beer)

                    Rolex has toyed with the original GMT since its debut in 1954, when the legendary Swiss brand starting manufacturing watches for Pan-Am airlines, notably through the use of color. For example, the original Rolex GMT "Root Beer", a relic from the early '70s, was heralded for its two-tone brown and gold bezel, instead of the definitive red-and-blue colorway.

                    Rolex reconfigured the model to the GMT-Master II and discontinued the Root Beer color scheme altogether. But it wasn't lost to history. The watchmaker brought it back at Baselword 2018 by way of the GMT-Master II that features a two-tone black and brown bezel with a two-tone Everose Rolesor bracelet. It’s not every day a Rolex legend gets reborn and that means finding it at retailers could be quite difficult. But it is possible to find it on the pre-owned market.

                    • Case Size: 40mm
                    • Movement: Calibre 3285 self-winding, GMT function
                    • Bracelet: Oyster Everose Rolesor

                      Learn More: Here Buy Now: $17,290+