New
Timekeepers Club / November 1, 2022

Byrne GyroDial Sport

The GyroDial Sport, a watch that changes its personality every morning


One watch, four appearances offered to you, without anything to do, every morning. Roman numerals, Arabic numerals, invisible dial or Sport dial with numbers inspired by sports jerseys enhanced with SuperLuminova... Thanks to its custom-made movement, Byrne invents the watch whose dial changes mood every day. Every night at midnight, or on demand, the four main indexes of the GyroDial dial change, carried by rotating cubes, with an instantaneous jump, which are flush with the surface of the dial.

Under the impetus of its creator John Byrne, three years of research and development in Fleurier, Switzerland, were necessary to give birth to this patented animation complication. The caliber 5555, was entirely designed, developed and manufactured in Switzerland for the GyroDial Sport. With its long, supple curves made of titanium, the dial with its hand-stretched finish presents a contemporary and very racy aesthetic.

A watch, 1 dial, 4 faces. The Byrne GyroDial and GyroDial Sport are a radical break from this timehonoured equation. In this day and age, everything is interchangeable and constantly changing. There was no reason for the mechanical watch to remain an exception in the new reality. Byrne Watches watch creations is a response to a societal observation.

The Byrne GyroDial features interchangeable indexes at the four cardinal points of its dial. As they change, they change the spirit of the dial by their size, revealing in turn the spirit of a new kind of watch. As radical as it is instantaneous and perfectly controlled, the rotation on the dial turns into a revolution in the wearing, as if having a different on the wrist every day, or whenever for that matter. Instantaneously. This explains the motto of the Byrne GyroDial: “Change your mind in a flash”.

Premise


Created by John Byrne following an extensive journey of technical and philosophical maturation, the GyroDial unequivocally bears the stamp of its originator. A designer by training, he very early on chanced upon collector's watches. Thanks to a series of fortunate encounters, he found himself a hunter of timekeeping rarities. Thus mandated by the greatest brands intent on reconstituting their heritage through acquisitions, he developed and cultivated the keenest eye for the fundamentals of watchmaking excellence. He fully immersed himself in this world, is fully connected with it. On a parallel track, he acquired a watch repair and refurbishing workshop, which soon earned the seal of approval from the most renowned Manufactures. This new facet of his professional life inspired John Byrne to add the ambition of technical sophistication to his natural inclinations as a designer.

Spark


GyroDial was born out of an epiphany. Creative processes are sometimes laborious, sometimes dazzling, often a mix of both. It was the latter that led to Byrne’s inaugural watch creation. One evening while attending a performance of George Balanchine's ballet Apollo musagetes at the Paris Opera, he witnessed the strangest scene: Four dancers changed their outfits almost instantaneously, as if they collided; the quartet became a single dancer with four different appearances. That summer evening, as he descended the monumental staircase of the Palais Garnier, something clicked. John Byrne was going to create a watch with four faces. So much for the dazzling. The longest, the most important and most time-consuming part was yet to come: developing the watch.

Impulse


In the hours following the ballet performance, John Byrne returned to his studio and immediately set to work. Movements and tools in hand, in the middle of the night, he undertook the first verifications that told him that his concept of an interchangeable face was at all possible, even feasible. The birth of GyroDial was a process that took more than four years, from initial research to sketches to successful search for suitable partners – to final delivery of the piece.

Outcome


The maturation of the project finally materialised: the GyroDial and the GyroDial Sport, titanium watches measuring 41.7 mm in diameter and 14.8 mm in thickness, with taut, modern lines. On their grey or blue dial, four windows that offer as many possibilities for the display, the face, the expression. Underneath, a calibre created-to-measure and manufactured in Fleurier comprising four rotating blocks. At midnight, or at whim, they rotate instantaneously to present a different face.

Individuality


But what would be the point of offering four faces instead of one if they in turn are also imposed, unchangeable? Absolutely consistent with the spirit of the GyroDial and its reality, Byrne imagines the GyroDial Sport with its 4 faces, one of which is directly inspired by the numbers flocked on sports jerseys. 45 steps are required to make the complete dial, which is entirely finished by hand.

The path of least resistance…cutting corners…doing things by halves. Concepts that are inconceivable to John Byrne. It would have been much simpler to start with an existing, straightforward calibre with a date disc and modify the latter. A controlled rotating ring, with rapid leaps, would have made it possible to avoid myriad complications. But this would have fallen quite a way short of Byrne's aesthetic vision. For one thing, a date disc is necessarily set back from the dial.

John Byrne's design is that of a perfectly smooth dial, the cardinal indexes are perfectly flush. Nothing betrays the face-changing operation, nothing hints at anything but the appearance one expects of a watch...

...until the next change. This seamless surface, with no edges or indentations, results from the perfect fit and fill of the rotating blocks within their respective windows. The handmade hands echo the dial, with a drawn line finish and SuperLuminova. This same seamlessness of design follows through with the case and the way it extends to the sapphire box crystal that tops it.

Fundamentals


On the other hand, the initial intention, rooted in the imagination whence sprung the dance that inspired John Byrne absolutely requires that the shift from one block face to the next be absolutely instantaneous. This is not only a technical must; it is also an artistic requisite. As is often the case in watchmaking, grace, style and identity are ultimately the expression of purely mechanical fundamentals, which must be mastered and made invisible at the same time. This called for not only an entirely new development on the complication front, but also for a perfectly adapted basic calibre for the GyroDial. Indeed, quite a large amount of energy needs to be generated to operate each cardinal index display module, a continuous process as it needs to again accumulate for the next shift.

Experiences


It is for all these reasons that Byrne turned to his watchmaking partner Le Temps Manufacture in Fleurier. Le Temps Manufacture works discreetly for some of the greatest names in Swiss watchmaking who entrust the specialist workshop with special, particularly complex projects.

John Byrne had been running a watch refurbishment and repair workshop for many years, so he knew what worked and what didn’t, what could bring a specific function to life and what might stifle it. After many fruitless searches, he finally found the partner who understood his vision and was able to transform it into a fully operational calibre, in every respect. Le Temps Manufacture delivered it: the calibre 5555. This 30 mm movement is self-winding and offers 60 hours of power reserve.

Precision


As each rotating block of the movement has the task of displaying one of four faces on the dial, the physical and aesthetic interaction between indices and dial was the subject of very special care and attention during development. First of all, their relative positioning leaves no room for approximation. Each index must be on the same plane as the dial, without even the slightest offset. It must very precisely fill the space of the window reserved for it in the dial plate – and precisely find its position after each “jump”, that is to say tens of thousands of times in the life of a GyroDial Sport.

Continuity


No gaps, no machining irregularities, a perfectly smooth transition between dial and index face – times four, meticulous centring of the axes... the finish of each rotating block had to be irreproachable because the surface of each cardinal index displayed at a given time must present a seamless continuation of the dial’s surface. This also means that each block face must have the absolute same texture and grain as the dial.

Spirit


As if mirroring what lies beneath, the dial presents a finish traditionally seen on the movement: a sweeping straight grain satin finish. It is executed in a single pass to ensure a perfect alignment of the myriad grooves that create the particular texture and its play with light. It gives GyroDial Sport, a sporty, dynamic, modern aesthetic – a hallmark of the Byrne identity. At the very end of the manufacturing process, the dial undergoes a galvanic treatment to dye it in slate grey or blue.

Housing


Together, the movement and the dial are housed in the GyroDial Sport case. A case created entirely in Switzerland for this model, entirely original, making no reference to any icon, any canon. It was conceived by John Byrne, who studied at a design school. With its curved profile, the case is as much an original work as the complexities it houses. First carved from a block of titanium, it is entirely Swiss made.

Fluidity


Fluid, even biomorphic, the case form stands out by the tautness of its lines, tense arcs that extend from lug to lug, far from facile indeed. Instead of one through line, the case presents several, harmoniously staggered between the different layers of this original construction. And as if to make them easier to apprehend, these various levels of perception are underlined by variations in finish.

Titanic


Such was the task of creating and machining the case. The case middle is satin-finished whilst the upper part of the case, between the case middle and the bezel, is entirely polished. The operation may seem trivial, but it is notoriously difficult to perform on the ultra-resistant metal that is titanium. Among the many advantages of its grade 5 variant, there is one that can be grasped and felt immediately: Despite its generous proportions, the watch barely reaches 100 grams on the scale. The second is rarer, as titanium is hardly ever presented in this polished form: the finish and brilliance of the GyroDial’s case are quite unique.

Harmony


The bezel, slim and clean-cut, effectively counterbalances the impression of thickness. An inevitable consequence of using rotating blocks, it has been reduced to the minimum possible by the state-ofthe-art in watchmaking and, by the magic of design, attenuated to almost the point of imperceptibility by the visual artifice that is the intelligence in the drawing. Indeed, the case design was the subject of an intense and thorough ergonomic study. It ensures perfect comfort, its soft curves following those of the wrist. The result is a slender, taut profile, with outward-reaching lugs flowing in line with the case middle. The GyroDial Sport is completed by a winding button symbolically engraved with the number 1, the highest step of the podium.

Connection


This approach necessarily flowed into designing the strap. It was impossible to leave little thought to the element that keeps the watch to the wrist after having put so much care into creating the case, movement, dial and, above all, the underlying concept. Hand-crafted by the specialised workshop of Jean Rousseau and entirely to Byrne's specifications, the strap is either saddle-stitched rubber or alligator, the latter with large scales. It contains two rigid inserts, placed in an interlining as close as possible to the lug width. These inserts again form a curve that naturally settles the GyroDial Sport on the wrist. It is on this stage that the watch changes costume every night at midnight, like a relay runner passing the baton to his teammate.

Technical specifications


Byrne GyroDial Sport

Case

  • Material: Grade 5 titanium, made in La-Chaux-de-Fonds in Switzerland
  • Diameter: 41.7 mm
  • Thickness: 14.8 mm
  • Finishes : By hand, glossy, satin
  • Crystal: Sapphire box, double-sided antireflective coating
  • Case back: Sapphire box, antireflective coating
  • Water-resistant to 50 meters (5 ATM)

Dial and hands

  • Blue or black, 4 different faces
  • Straight grain satin finish, hollow embossed indices
  • Windows at 3, 6, 9 and 12 o’clock
  • White/blue SuperLuminova underlined indexes
  • Push-button engraved with the number 1

Movement

  • Swiss, developed in Fleurier by LTM 5555, mechanical self-winding
  • Finishes: Plate and bridges in nickel silver, satin-finished and rhodium-plated, straight grain satin finish, Côtes de Genève chamfering and finishing by hand
  • Diameter: 30.00 mm
  • Thickness: 8.00 mm
  • Number of parts: 261
  • Number of jewels: 42
  • Frequency: 28,800 vph (4 Hz)
  • Power reserve: 60 hours

Functions/Indications

  • Hours, minutes
  • Changing cardinal indices with an instantaneous switch every day at midnight or at will.

Strap and buckle

  • Blue or black rubber, or blue or black alligator, custom integrated curved inserts
  • Grade 5 titanium buckle

MSRP

  • CHF 16'500 / EUR 16'500 / USD 17'500 (excluding VAT)

For more information, please visit Byrne website.

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