Replica Watches Free Shipping Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM


Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

What’s next?” is the question that’s been on the lips of the nation – or at least those concerned Panerai fans, who thus far had to wonder what the next frontier may be for their beloved brand. The Luminor undoubtedly is the more popular and successful among Panerai collections – arguably paling the Radiomir in comparison – and while the brand has not shied away from releasing myriads of different iterations, the time has come for them today to release Luminor’s chapter due. Enter the Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days, with the new and in fact thinnest Luminors ever, the PAM676 and PAM677 pieces. Let’s dig in and see if the due name is justified.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

The new Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days PAM675 45mm in red gold

Due (pronounced “doo-eh”) stands for to “two” in Italian, and that quite clearly marks how Panerai is launching the second chapter Luminor case. Wow. The name of the game is thickness – or rather the very lack of it. The Panerai Luminor Due case, in some instances, is up to 40% thinner than the comparable Luminor Uno (no, they have not started calling them that).

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

Here’s the hand-wound, 42mm wide steel version, the Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days PAM676

Panerai is quick to stress, though, that “the ingredients for the new case are the ones well known to every connoisseur: the robust cushion case, large dial surrounded by the bezel (arguably not the most novel feature of all time), strong integrated lugs and the bridge-shaped device which seals the crown.” You need not be the most eagle-eyed of Paneristi either to see that the Luminor Due is heavily based on the Luminor 1950 case: it has what appears to be an extremely similar case and lug profile, albeit the aforementioned diet has of course taken effect.

 

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

Panerai P.1000 hand-wound in the PAM676

The Panerai Luminor Due line will be debuted by four models, a steel and gold version in both 42- and 45-millimeter sizes. Let’s see them one-by-one.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

The Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days PAM676 and PAM677 are the 42-millimeter-wide models – the references refer to the 316L and red gold versions, respectively. Both will come in 10.5 millimeter thick cases with the in-house P.1000 manufacture fitted inside. The movement, unsurprisingly, will provide 3 days worth of power reserve, operate at a most welcome 4 Hertz. Notably – for those who are eyeing the red gold version – the caliber’s P.1000/10 skeletonized version makes its debut in the precious metal model. We have seen Panerai produce some very impressive-looking skeletonized movements before (check this 10 Days GMT PAM624, for example), so this is good news; and even your run-of-the-mill P.1000 in the steel PAM676 offers plenty of eye-candy.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

The automatic Panerai Luminor Due is just 10.7 millimeters thick

The dials, because they are always subject to scrutiny by the fans of the brand, are either black in the steel version, or anthracite grey in the gold PAM677. They have the classic sandwich structure and their top surface has been “enhanced” by a satiné soleil finish – that actually stands for “satin sun” and is in French, just to tingle your multi-lingo senses a bit.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

The hand-wound 42s are followed by automatic 45-millimeter-wide alternatives with the Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 in steel and PAM675 in red gold. Powered by the micro-rotor-equipped P.4000 in-house caliber, these also sport the claimed 72 hours of power reserve and the 4-Hertz frequency, while coming in at a mere 3.95 millimeters thick. The end result is a case that is unnoticeably thicker than the 42: the PAM674 and PAM675’s 45mm cases will be just 10.7 millimeters thick. As was the case with the smaller versions, the the red gold PAM675 will get a skeletonized caliber, in this instance, the P.4000/10.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

With all this noted, we must return to discussing the case in a bit greater detail. The impressive thinness (for Panerai, that is) would have hardly been possible for the brand had it not had these sufficiently thin in-house calibers in its stable – so good planning there. The thinner profile also helps solve an issue that must have been on the minds of many Panerai Luminor owners: often coming in at over 15 millimeters thick, even if the watch’s aesthetics complied with more elegant outfits, they simply did not always make for a comfortable wearing experience with long sleeves. This new Panerai Luminor Due collection should remedy that issue and offer Panerai buyers an option that will allow them to pick a watch that sports their desired looks but at the same time lacks the compromise in wearing comfort.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

Still, I feel there is something missing to justify the Due part of the name. Panerai has the Luminor 1950 and the Radiomir 1940, fair enough – and it is also understandable that they wouldn’t (and couldn’t) drift too far away from the Luminor’s very defined and much loved core DNA… And yet, a question (to be answered by every individual Panerai fan) is whether or not a merely thinner option justifies the chapter two designation?

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

Also worth noting is that although Panerai says they have designed a new case here, they have engineered it so that it only has 30 meters of water resistance. Now, despite the fact that the Luminor Due is certainly a more elegant (simply because it’s thinner) line, Panerai still claims that it has a “robust cushion case” and that “all the elements originate directly from the history of the brand.” A mere 30 meter depth rating – that actually more often than not equates to a watch that maybe is suitable for baths and showers and usually not at all recommended for swimming – hardly implies a robust design and construction…

Yes, we have seen Panerais with 30m ratings before, but what is the world coming to if the latest and greatest (and still technically rather simple) Panerai Luminor can’t make you feel safe wearing it during a swim in the pool – let alone in the open waters. There are not too many actual, measurable and comparable technical specifications that give watch brands a chance to back their claims with, but this rating will likely bother some fans of the brand – and we’ll leave many others totally unconcerned, of course.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Watches Debut New Luminor Line In 42 & 45MM Watch Releases

The new Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days case looks every bit as refined and as Panerai as one could hope for, but when I think of what a new, 21st-century Luminor Chapter Two could possibly be, I can’t help but imagine something that is more than a new option that is actually less.

Prices for the new Panerai Luminor Due models is as follows:
Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days PAM676 in 42mm steel is $8,100;
I have a soft spot for meticulously hand-engraved watch dials. For me personally, it is the epitome of having the ability to wear traditional hand-made art in your wrist. Obviously, it is true that watch movements when created properly are highly artistic, but I am talking about more traditional “representative” art that is meant to depict the real (and dream) world around us. So with this said, you’ll understand why I am rather keen on these new Blancpain Villeret Shakudo watches that incorporate the Japanese metallic alloy and engraving method into the new Swiss watches.Blancpain isn’t a stranger to watches using hand-engraved dials. The company has been making some of the most amazing hand-engraved watches (and movements) that are available now. Blancpain frequently works with extremely skilled artists both in-house and commissioned to produce a series of nice limited edition watches which come in numerous varieties. The new Blancpain Villeret Shakudo collection also has a few versions meant to showcase with craft that is unique, and each is a piece unique. In this article, we show you hand-held images of the Blancpain Villeret Shakudo Ganesh, as well as the Blancpain Villeret Shakudo Coelacanth. These are, of course, in honor of the Hindu god as well as the endangered ancient fish species that in some of the sponsorship attempts Blancpain is trying to help protect and study.
Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days PAM677 in 42mm red gold is $22,100;
Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 in 45mm steel is $10,700;
Panerai  Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM675 in 45mm red gold is $25,600. panerai.com

Japanese Movement Replica Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review


Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Exactly one year ago, when Panerai launched the Luminor Due, it was well-documented that I wasn’t convinced about this new, second chapter for the much-loved Luminor collection. To come to grips with it and see what it’s like in the metal, I decided to review the Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674, which is the stainless steel, 45mm wide version of the four pieces that Panerai debuted the Luminor Due collection with.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The Luminor Due presently comes in either 42mm or 45mm-wide cases in either steel or red gold, with the 42mm versions featuring the P.1000, which is a good-looking, small, hand-wound, “3 Days” caliber. The 45mm variants, like the one we are looking at here, are powered by the still remarkably thin but complicated P.4000 in-house caliber, which also offers 3 days of power reserve but adds micro-rotor-driven automatic winding to the mix and about $2,000 to the price. As such, we are looking at a Luminor that retails for slightly over the $10k mark. All this noted, what I first had issues with were the name and some of the specs of the Luminor Due, so let’s see if these start to make sense in real life before we do our regular review run-down on the PAM674.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Luminor Due As In Luminor Two

Due (pronounced “doo-eh”) means “two” in Italian, so the Luminor Due collection carries the weight of being the second generation or second chapter of the Luminor, one of the most successful and recognizable (see how I avoided saying “iconic”?) watch collections of this century. Also, this is exactly what baffled me when I covered the Luminor Due upon its debut in May 2016.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

In my mind, in line with product naming practices across any industry I can think of, when a product name has a sequence number added to it, I am led to believe it is all around as good as, or superior to the one that preceded it. This applies to cars, technology, aviation, household electronics, and pretty much every other industry. So the Luminor Due, one could think, is destined by definition to not only succeed, but also outperform the regular Luminor.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

However, the Luminor Due offers a remarkably disappointing 30 meters of water resistance, which is measly for any watch and heresy for one that says Panerai on the dial. The Due doesn’t stop there because, like a true Luminor, it has the bare cheek to boast the “REG. TM.” marked crown protector. So, the question stands…

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Can And Should This Be A Luminor?

With this major shortcoming noted, I’ll still say: yes, and here’s why. Panerais and especially Luminors are never really very pretty. Cool, masculine, old-school, dashing, even – all these things, surely, but pretty… nah. A pretty Panerai is a rare breed, even if they do get the proportions right a lot of the time. I would not consider any Panerai pretty, save for the two exceptions that enforce the rule – each a Radiomir 1940 in red gold: the PAM575 and the PAM513. The PAM690 in steel comes close with its terrific blue dial and neat case, but misses out by being 47mm and having a petite sub-seconds.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

As you have guessed by now, this is where the Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 comes into the picture. The PAM674 is sold on a black leather strap – the most boring strap in all of strap history and one that does little justice to the watch, though it is, admittedly, a nice back-up if you want to wear it with formal attire. So, after putting it on to ease my conscience, I removed the black strap. Drilled lugs are appreciated and, in this instance, work much better aesthetically than the large, screw-secured pins. The strap I installed is an aged, tan leather strap that truly transformed the looks of the watch.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

All this was to describe the uncomplicated process that led to the following awe-inspiring moment. As I went back to the PAM674, now with the tan strap (highlighting the tan numerals and text), laying on its crown protector, I clearly recall thinking to myself, sort of in shock: “My God, that’s a great looking watch.” A challenge to imitate with photography, but a memorable moment that did very much happen.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Design & Execution

There is something special that its new-found thinness – a slender 10.70mm for the PAM674 even with the slightly domed crystal and angled lugs – gives to the Luminor 1950 case. It looks effortless, light and, even in this 45mm version, beautifully proportionate. However, I would prefer the PAM676 in 42mm, which would admittedly fit my wrist size better.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

I say this pretty much every time when I discuss aesthetics, and it really should go without saying: aesthetics is something for everyone to make up their minds about on their own. But, what can objectively be determined about the Luminor Due is that it is one of the least intrusive, most balanced Panerai designs to date – and this, being a new take from Panerai, is finally something that praises the work of today’s Panerai designers, not those from two generations ago.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The magical combination of a perfectly round bezel and a cushion case needs no introduction to anyone who has ever liked a Panerai design, but the Due does offer a different take on the longstanding recipe. First, the bezel is very thin but, with its steep edge and relatively considerable height, it stands out enough that it doesn’t appear too small or fragile. The cushion case is a take not on the regular Luminor, but rather, the Luminor 1950 with the profile turning upwards and into the upper corners, rather than running into vertical lines. This further enhances that slender, filigree look, while the neatly defined (and equally nice-to-the-touch) edge that runs along the full length of the side adds some visual interest and a nice tactile element.

The short, narrow, curved lugs and the minute space between the strap and the edge of the case all appear thoughtfully designed and, again, the drilled holes serve as a nod towards the Luminor Due’s tool watch ancestors – even if this second chapter very clearly isn’t one.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Something I could not get bored of over the three or so weeks that I had the PAM674 was the slim crown protector bridge – and that, I understand, certainly sounds like a contender for this month’s coveted “Nerdiest Sentence of the Month” award. It completely transforms the look of this ubiquitous component. While the regular crown protectors I found at times were large for the sake of being large or just simply too bulky, every time I saw this one peeking out from under a shirt sleeve, I just had to rotate my wrist and take a better look at it. Maybe that’s just me, but something definitely ticked as this polished bridge sat so neatly nearby the complex corner of the case. If, for whatever reason, you want a similar Panerai without a crown guard, the Radiomir 1940 PAM572 is essentially the same (hands-on here).

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Legibility & Wearability

Legibility is good, as the reflective outlines of the hands contrast nicely against the satin look of the dial. The dark grey sandwich dial of the Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 actually has a very subtle sunburst finishing to it that is completely unnoticeable under low-light conditions and stands out only when hit by strong light at an angle. It is a nice, quality detail but one that will take the back seat next to other dial elements. Lume is good, though as is normal for non-traditional lume colors like this one in tan, the green glow is not as bright and lasting as it is on regular Panerais.

I’ve a soft spot for thoroughly hand-engraved watch dials. For me, it is the epitome of being able to wear traditional hand-made art on your wrist. Of course, it’s true that watch moves when produced properly are exceptionally artistic, but I am speaking about more conventional “representative” artwork that is meant to portray the real (and fantasy) world around us. So with that said, you’ll understand why I am rather keen on those new Blancpain watches facebook Replica Villeret Shakudo watches which incorporate the Japanese metallic alloy and engraving technique into the new Swiss watches.Blancpain is no stranger to watches with hand-engraved dials. The company has been making some of their most amazing hand-engraved watches (and moves) that are available now. Blancpain often works with exceptionally skilled artists both in house and commissioned to produce a collection of nice limited edition watches which come in numerous varieties. The new Blancpain Villeret Shakudo collection also has a couple of models meant to showcase with special craft, and each is a bit unique. In this guide, we show you hands-on pictures of the Blancpain Villeret Shakudo Ganesh, as well as the Blancpain Villeret Shakudo Coelacanth. All these are, of course, in honor of the Hindu god in addition to the endangered ancient fish species which in some of their sponsorship attempts Blancpain is trying to help safeguard and study.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

The crystal, like on most Panerais, is simply way too reflective. I have a theory that says this added reflectivity gives a subconscious, unidentified sense of enhanced “luxury” to those who know absolutely nothing about watches and are just going with the “the shinier the more valuable” approach. Given the wide popularity and market that Panerai is in, I guess this is a tactic that works. This noted, I genuinely cannot think of any other possible explanation – and I know even this one is a bit of a stretch. Still, the reflectivity of the crystal is so “good” that it gives a remarkably sharp image of whatever is behind or over you. You can see your face when you look at it or the back of your phone as you try and take a picture, or the individual leaves on the trees above. Under some lighting conditions, reflectivity is not too bad – it is in outdoor environments where it really becomes too much.

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Panerai Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic PAM674 Watch Review Wrist Time Reviews

Wearability has been excellent, even if this 45mm version, again, is more ideal for those with 7.5″ or larger wrists. Because it is thin, the PAM674 does not get caught up on sleeves, it just slides under, which makes it that much more comfortable to wear. The 24mm-wide black strap was thin by Panerai standards and, with its tang buckle, easy to put on. The strap I ended up wearing with the PAM674, though, was this tan piece from Junik, which worked so much better with the overall looks. When buying, I would definitely ask the boutique/store to replace the factory black strap to something of this color since, as a daily wearer, this is just a much more vibrant, but no less elegant combination. Furthermore, you can always pick up an aftermarket black strap for twenty bucks or so to wear on more formal occasions.