









No Reserve
8108
Zenith
Ref. 03.3114.3600/51.M3100
Chronomaster Sport
A fine and attractive stainless steel chronograph wristwatch with bracelet, 1/10th of a second, date, warranty and presentation box
- Estimate
- HK$30,000 - 60,000•€3,300 - 6,600$3,800 - 7,700
HK$33,020
Lot Details
- Manufacturer
- Zenith
- Year
- Circa 2024, Switzerland
- Reference No
- 03.3114.3600/51.M3100
- Movement No
- 766’185
- Case No
- 673’234
- Model Name
- Chronomaster Sport
- Material
- Stainless steel
- Calibre
- Automatic, cal. 3600, 35 jewels
- Bracelet/Strap
- Stainless steel Zenith bracelet, max length 175mm
- Clasp/Buckle
- Stainless steel Zenith deployant clasp
- Dimensions
- 41mm diameter
- Signed
- Case, dial, movement, bracelet and clasp signed
- Accessories
- Accompanied by Zenith warranty card stamped Cortina Watch Raffles City Singapore, dated 23 June 2024, instruction manual, leather card holder, 4 additional links, hang tag, cloth, fitted presentation box and outer packaging.
Specialist
Full-Cataloguing
Catalogue Essay
- The Zenith Chronomaster Sport chronograph is a modern version of the Striking Tenth which first patented circa 2002 with the introduction of the cal. 4052. Fitted with the newly upgraded high beat El Primero cal. 3600 and beating at 5Hz, the chronograph measures time down to 1/10th of a second prompted by a pump pusher, it also features hacking seconds, quick-set date and has an upgraded power reserve of 60 hours of action.
- Aesthetically pleasing with blued screws and a large blued steel column-wheel, the wearer can admire the cal. 3600 with unobstructed view thanks to the skeletonized star shaped Zenith Rotor.
- Sized at 41mm and cased in stainless steel, the Zenith Chronomaster Sport features a tri-color dial that differentiates its overlapping registers clearly: 60-second, 60 minute and small seconds. The Zenith star logos can be spotted both on the chronograph counterbalance as well as the applied logo at 12 o’clock which is a nice sporty touch to the overall timepiece.
- Preserved in virtually unworn condition and complete with its warranty and accessories, the present Zenith Chronomaster Sport is a joy to operate and wear.
- Aesthetically pleasing with blued screws and a large blued steel column-wheel, the wearer can admire the cal. 3600 with unobstructed view thanks to the skeletonized star shaped Zenith Rotor.
- Sized at 41mm and cased in stainless steel, the Zenith Chronomaster Sport features a tri-color dial that differentiates its overlapping registers clearly: 60-second, 60 minute and small seconds. The Zenith star logos can be spotted both on the chronograph counterbalance as well as the applied logo at 12 o’clock which is a nice sporty touch to the overall timepiece.
- Preserved in virtually unworn condition and complete with its warranty and accessories, the present Zenith Chronomaster Sport is a joy to operate and wear.
Zenith
Swiss | 1865Since Zenith's beginnings, founder George Favre-Jacot sought to manufacture precision timepieces, realizing quality control was best maintained when production was housed under one roof. Zenith remains one of the few Swiss manufacturers to produce their own in-house movements to this day.
Today, the brand is best known for the "El Primero," the firm's most successful automatic chronograph movement. In an interesting twist of fate, the company that owned Zenith during the 1970s decided to move on to quartz movements and therefore sought to destroy the parts and tools necessary to make mechanical movements. One watchmaker realized this folly and hid the tools and parts before they were destroyed. In 1984, he returned them to Zenith so they could once again make the El Primero movement.
Browse MakerToday, the brand is best known for the "El Primero," the firm's most successful automatic chronograph movement. In an interesting twist of fate, the company that owned Zenith during the 1970s decided to move on to quartz movements and therefore sought to destroy the parts and tools necessary to make mechanical movements. One watchmaker realized this folly and hid the tools and parts before they were destroyed. In 1984, he returned them to Zenith so they could once again make the El Primero movement.