Chronograph Watches
- Bremont - ALT-1-C Classic
- Bremont - Arrow Chronograph
- Bell Ross - RS17 Renault Chrono BR 03-94
- Breitling - Aerospace
- Breitling - Aerospace Avantage LE
- Breitling - Avenger Skyland 'Code Yellow'
- Breitling - Bentley Chronograph B06
- Breitling - Bentley GMT B05 Unitime
- Breitling - Chrono-Matic 44
- Breitling - Chronomat
- Breitling - Chronomat Evolution
- Breitling - Chronomat Evolution
- Breitling - Heritage Chrono-Matic Flyback
- Breitling - Heritage Chrono-Matic Flyback
- Breitling - Navitimer '50th Anniversary'
- Breitling - Navitimer 09 Japan Limited Edition
- Breitling - Navitimer 1 B01 Chronograph 43
- Breitling - Navitimer 1 B01 Chronograph 43 TWA
- Breitling - Navitimer 1 Chronograph 41
- Breitling - Navitimer Airborne
- Breitling - Navitimer B01 Chronograph
- Breitling - Navitimer Montbrillant Olympus LE
- Breitling - Super Avenger
- Breitling - Super Avenger Chronograph 48
Chronograph Watches Watches
Chronographs are watches with the integrated capabilities of a stopwatch. The idea of the chronograph was first conceived in 1776 as a way to record the time of a projectile's flight, but the first commercially built chronograph didn't appear until 1816, and was used by King Louis XVIII to record the time of horse races.
The modern automatic chronograph was revealed by in 1969, first by Seiko, then by the Chronomatic collaboration (Heuer, Breitling, Hamilton, and Dubois-Depraz), and finally by Zenith. The term "chronometer" is often confused with "chronograph" -- the former is a chronograph that has been certified by the Controle Officiel Suisse des Chronometres, the institute responsible for verification and certification of the accuracy and precision of wristwatches in Switzerland.