TAG Heuer Carrera Mikrotourbillons models

HauteHorlo

 

TAG Heuer’s most ambitious luxury chronograph to date, the MIKROTOURBILLONS is not only the
world’s fastest tourbillon
: it is the first ever tourbillon on a 1/100th of a second chronograph that can be started and stopped, an audacious timepiece of peerless precision and virtuosic savoir-faire.

Even by TAG Heuer’s own pioneering metrics, the dual-chain, double-barreled MIKROTOURBILLONS, is entirely off-the-chart extraordinary. The first Tourbillon chronograph capable of certification-level precision timing, it is by far the fastest, most accurate and most breathtakingly beautiful tourbillon ever imagined.

 

TAG Heuer Carrera Mikrotourbillons TAG Heuer Carrera Mikrotourbillons
  • Mikrotourbillons

    The Ultimate in High Precision
    Haute Horlogerie

    Mikrotourbillons

    Considered as the ultimate watchmaking complication, the tourbillon is the signature of the greatest manufactures of all times but is often sourced from external and independent manufactures. In 2012, TAG Heuer’s engineers and watchmasters re-invent the tourbillon by introducing the MikrotourbillonS, the first high-frequency dual tourbillon chronograph entirely envisioned, developed and manufactured internally. The company creates a complete revolution by integrating in the same timepiece the ultimate complication: chronograph and tourbillon.

    Equipped with a fast tourbillon rotating once per minute with a 4Hz regulator and a revolutionary tourbillon rotating 12 times per minute with a 50Hz regulator, it is the utmost chronograph masterpiece in term of speed, precision and accuracy. The TAG Heuer MikrotourbillonS is the world’s most accurate dual tourbillon, 50 Hz, dynamically compensated; the world’s fastest tourbillon rotating every five seconds; the world’s only dual tourbillon designed for precision timing; the world’s only dual tourbillon capable of measuring and displaying, like the Mikrograph, one hundredth of a second and the world’s only dual tourbillon capable of creating a “certifiable” chronograph.