Timeline Watch
1964

Breitling Navitimer

China detonates its first atomic bomb

1964 vintage Breitling Navitimer 806. One of the last of the second generation ref. 806.

A vintage Breitling Navitimer 806 remains near the top of virtually every vintage watch collectors wish list.

The vintage Breitling Navitimer 806 internal rotating bezel is a slide-rule navigation computer which makes complex mathematical calculations useful to pilots.

Note the Breitling + AOPA dial and breadth of rice bezel which is very rare on silvered sub-dial Navitimer.

Jerry Seinfeld, Graham Hill, Jim Clark, Miles Davis all wear (or wore) a vintage Breitling Navitimer 806 with black & white dial.

The Navitimer 806 Chosen as the official timepiece of AOPA,Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. Something which Breitling has traded on ever since.

A 24-hour dial version, the Cosmonaute, was also produced in the early 60s.

The first generation Navitimer 806 came in the early 50s, they had Arabic numerals, black dials and sub-dials.

The second generation shows silver sub-dials and index instead of numbers.

Many early Navitimers didn’t have the Breitling logo, but the AOPA wing on the dial.

Some rare dials show the AOPA wings and the letter B instead of the Breitling logo.

Breitling has been a leading innovator in high quality stopwatches and chronographs and helped define how chronographs look and function until today.

Breitling launched the first wrist chronograph with a pusher at 2:00 in 1915.

Presented in 1933 as the first dual pusher wrist chronograph with pushers at 2:00 and 4:00 o’clock.

Breitling was one of the first manufacturers to recognize the need of early aviators for wrist watches incorporating such devices.

In 1942 Breitling introduced the Chronomat, the worlds first Smart Watch, a chronograph with a rotating logarithmic slide rule that allowed complex calculations with the turn of your fingers.

Throughout the 1930s to 50s, Breitling continued creating chronographs with different scales to suit different professions, such as tachometers for production engineers and drivers, and pulsometersfor doctors.