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Why The Grand Seiko Spring Drive Is The Greatest Watch Movement & How It Works
Japan’s Grand Seiko has become, in a relatively short span of time, one of the world’s most prestigious and collectible high-luxury watchmakers, competing for connoisseur attention and dollars with well-established maisons from Switzerland and Germany. And while its success is definitely a 21st century phenomenon, Grand Seiko is not really a “new brand” in the strictest sense. The first Grand Seiko watch (below) debuted all the way back in 1960, part of the much larger product portfolio of Japanese watchmaking giant Seiko, which was founded in 1881 and achieved its worldwide fame by embracing the mass market with timepieces at accessible prices with wide distribution. The Grand Seiko, by contrast, was positioned as the megabrand’s exclusive “King of Watches,” with standards of accuracy, beauty, durability, and legibility that could meet or surpass its Swiss competitors.
Until 2010, it was also Japan’s best-kept horological secret, not exported to markets outside the country. Seven years after its international expansion, having cultivated a loyal and avid audience worldwide, an entirely new and distinct customer base apart from mainline Seiko’s, Grand Seiko firmly established itself as an independent brand — albeit one still intrinsically tied to its parent company through shared history and technology. Among those technologies is an innovative type of watch movement that was perfected right before the turn of the 21st Century and remains the exclusive purview of just two watch manufacturers, Grand Seiko and its much older parent brand, Seiko, called Spring Drive. As we will explore in depth here, the Spring Drive is a natural evolution of the Japanese watchmaker’s longtime mission of technical innovation in the service of improved timekeeping.
Seiko was at the vanguard of the 20th Century’s first major technical evolution in timekeeping, which arrived in 1969, less than a decade after the debut of Grand Seiko. That year saw the introduction of the Seiko Astron and its groundbreaking Caliber 35A, now legendary as the first quartz movement in a wristwatch. Quartz movements differ from traditional mechanical ones (explained in great detail here) in that their energy comes from a tiny electrical charge generated by a battery rather than from a coiled mainspring and an escapement. The battery charge passes through an integrated circuit (IC) that applies it to a tiny quartz crystal cut into the shape of a tuning fork, causing it to vibrate at an incredibly high rate that dwarfs the output of a mechanical watch’s oscillator (32,768 times per second, as opposed to 3 or 4 times per second) which in turn powers a tiny motor that drives the second hand in one-second jumps rather than in a smooth, sweeping motion. Watches outfitted with this invention proved to be more energy-efficient, more accurate, more shock-resistant, and perhaps most momentously, much more affordable than their predecessors with mechanical movements. Seiko, and many of its competitors both inside and outside of Japan, still use quartz movements today in watches that are aimed at a lower price segment, while mechanical movements also live on in higher-end timepieces aimed at traditionalists.
Around 1977, a Seiko engineer named Yoshikazu Akahane began conceiving a new type of watch movement that would combine aspects of both the mechanical movements that the company had been using since the late 19th Century and the quartz-powered ones that it had been so instrumental in pioneering in the 1960s. The inspiration, so the legend goes, came from Akahane witnessing a bicycle descend a hill at a constant speed while using its brake; he reasoned that using a similar “braking” concept in a watch movement, minus the use of a balance wheel, could produce a smooth, fluid motion for a watch’s hands — rather than the halting, jumping motion of hands operated by a quartz movement. The original name that Akahane gave to this hypothetical device was “Quartz Lock.”
He completed the first prototype of his invention in 1982, but it would be more than 15 years later before the project would become a top priority for Seiko’s engineering team. In 1997, Akahane took over the leadership of the watch development division and placed his brainchild, now called Spring Drive, on the front burner. One year later, at the 1998 Basel Watch Fair in Switzerland, Seiko presented the first working model of the Spring Drive (above), and the first commercially sold watches equipped with the revolutionary new movement debuted in 1999 — all limited editions, all exclusively sold in Japan. Two of the watches, Ref. SBWA001 (below) and SBWA002, carried the Seiko branding; the third, Ref. GBLG99, was released as part of Seiko’s ultra-exclusive Credo line, rarely encountered outside Japan and usually reserved for the Japanese manufacture’s most ambitious horological inventions. The first-generation Spring Drive calibers inside these models, dubbed either 7R68 and 7R78, were manually wound and held a fairly standard power reserve of 48 hours. Sadly, Akahane did not live to see the ultimate realization of his vision, as he passed away at the young age of 52 in 1998.
Other milestones for the Spring Drive followed in quick succession. In 2002, Seiko launched the first non-limited Spring Drive watch, Ref. SMK005J, which came in an 18k white-gold case. In 2004, Seiko cleared another major technical hurdle with the introduction of Caliber 9R65, the first Spring Drive movement with automatic winding. Speaking to Seiko’s pride in its accomplishment, that movement debuted inside a Grand Seiko watch (Ref. SBGA001, below) — and thus, as per protocol at the time, was accessible only to buyers in Japan. In addition to the automatic winding system, Caliber 9R65 also boasted a higher power reserve (72 hours) than its predecessors and a daily accuracy of +/1 second. Caliber 9R65, which powers the time, central seconds, date display, and dial-side power-reserve indication, remains the most common Spring Drive movement in Grand Seiko models. A year later, Seiko added a GMT function to create the offshoot Caliber 9R66.
That same year, 2005, the rest of the watch world finally had a chance to experience Spring Drive, with the international launch of three references in the main Seiko line: Ref. SNR001, SNR003, or SNR005 depending on dial color, all outfitted with Caliber 5R65, a version of Caliber 9R65 with a slightly less refined level of finishing. (Generally, Spring Drive calibers used in Seiko rather than Grand Seiko watches all hail from this 5R family, a necessity of the former’s overall lower price points. The 9R family of Spring Drive calibers, which we’ll focus on here, are exclusive to Grand Seiko.) Seiko’s watchmaking team added another complication to the base Spring Drive caliber in 2007: the new Caliber 9R86 combined a three-hand time display, date, GMT, power reserve, and a column-wheel-driven chronograph function, and was noteworthy for maintaining its three-day power reserve even with the stopwatch constantly running. In the wake of Grand Seiko’s international coming-out party in 2010, and its second act as an independent brand beginning in 2017, the braintrust at parent company Seiko has continued to produce new and even more optimized versions of its Spring Drive caliber, which we’ll explore below. But first things first:
Essentially, in the spirit of Yoshikazu Akahane’s original vision, Spring Drive is designed to combine the high torque of a traditional mechanical watch movement with the high precision of a quartz one — in other words, a mainspring-powered watch that can achieve the accuracy of a battery-powered one, a type of timekeeper that perhaps only Seiko, with its dual organizational skill sets of mechanical and electronic engineering, would have even attempted to develop. It accomplishes this chiefly through the use of a trio of devices that Seiko has developed in-house over the years. One is the Spron 510 mainspring, made of a proprietary high-elasticity material engineered to deliver more power, more smoothly, and for a more extended period, to the regulator. The second is the so-called Magic Lever, invented by Seiko in 1959, which is affixed directly to the shaft of the rotor for a more efficient winding motion. Both of these elements are present in Seiko and Grand Seiko mechanical movements; in a Spring Drive movement, they are joined by the third in-house innovation, the Tri-Synchro regulator, which replaces the escapement and regulates the three types of energy generated by the movement: the mainspring’s mechanical energy, the quartz crystal oscillator’s electrical energy, and the resulting electro-magnetic energy that turns the glide wheel, which replaces a traditional balance wheel in the Spring Drive architecture and rotates uniformly over an electromagnetic coil.
This glide wheel’s speedy rotation (8 times per second, or 28,800 times per hour) generates the small electrical current that is transferred to the quartz oscillator, which is then transmitted to the IC, which compares the reference signal from the oscillator with the speed of the glide wheel and regulates the latter with a magnetic brake. This electromagnetically regulated rate is transferred to the gear train to move the watch’s hands in that smooth, gliding motion that emulates that of a mechanically powered watch. The energy all flows in one direction — mainspring to rotor to wheels to hands — thus all but eliminating the friction that can plague a standard mechanical caliber and resulting in a rate accuracy of around +/-15 seconds per month. In later versions, Grand Seiko would further improve that astounding monthly rate accuracy to +/-10 seconds as it fine-tuned and optimized its Spring Drive technology in subsequent years. (Click on the video below for Teddy's deep dive into the Spring Drive technology.) As Grand Seiko points out, a major advantage of this type of movement is that it requires no battery or step motor, as would a quartz movement, and thus will work reliably even after many years have passed.
Here is a look at the Spring Drive calibers found in today’s Grand Seiko collection (in more or less alphanumerical order, rather than chronological order of release), what their main attributes are, and which watches use them.Introduced in 2021, the Spring Drive 5 Days Caliber 9RA2 incorporates all the attributes of the Caliber 9RA5 introduced in 2020, Grand Seiko’s 60th anniversary year, and adds a new setting for the hands and a power-reserve indicator on the rear side. It is slimmer than its predecessor by 0.8mm due to both the new hand-setting and the repositioning of the Offset Magic Lever away from the center. The gear train and its one-piece center bridge have also been reworked to ensure a high degree of rigidity and shock resistance despite its thinness. Two differently sized barrels store an improved power reserve of 120 hours, while a vacuum-sealed quartz oscillator and accompanying temperature sensor aid in maintaining a timekeeping accuracy between +/- 10 seconds per month. In keeping with Grand Seiko’s modern brand identity, Caliber 9RA5 also boasts haute horlogerie finishes that evoke Japan’s natural landscape and climate, like the frosted effect on the plates and bridges inspired by snow-covered Shinshu forests. The bridge lines and hole edges are diamond-cut to reflect light at various angles and the power reserve indicator hand is blued to match the heat-tempered screws that dapple the back of the movement with bright color splashes.
Caliber 9RA2 can be found in the SLGA007 and SLGA008 140th Anniversary Limited Editions, released in 2021. The former, in a 40mm stainless steel case with Grand Seiko’s signature Zaratsu-polished finish, sports a blue wavy-patterned dial meant to evoke the rippling surface of Japan’s Lake Suwa; the latter (above), in a rose-gold case of the same dimensions, has a brown dial with a wood-grain texture that emulates the radial age rings of ancient trees.
This successor to the previous caliber 9R6 pumps up that movement’s power reserve to a full five days, a 60 percent increase from that of its predecessor. It also offers an even higher monthly precision rate — +/- 10 seconds, up from the +/- 15 seconds baseline established by earlier Spring Drive calibers — and a quicker date change. Its reduction in thickness, from 5.8 mm to 5 mm, is partly due to a repositioning of the Magic Lever away from the center. The stem and crown are set near the back to lower the center of gravity, while the gear train is closer to the center, held by a one-piece central bridge that aids in the movement’s enhanced rigidity and shock resistance. The 120-hour power reserve is stored in two mainspring barrels of different sizes, better for torque and for optimizing the use of space. Caliber 9RA5 is the first Spring Drive movement equipped with a sensor to monitor its internal temperature and to compensate for any related changes in the crystal’s oscillation rate. Vacuum-sealed together, the oscillator and the sensor are protected from the ill effects of humidity, static electricity and light interference, all factors that could affect the movement’s accuracy. For the finishing, Seiko’s engineers took inspiration from the surroundings of the workshop where the caliber is made: the jewels are arranged to reflect the starry night sky in early winter over the nearby mountains and the surface texture is reminiscent of those mountains’ winter frost.
The new movement made its debut in Grand Seiko’s luxury divers’ watch, the SLGA002, housed inside a 46.9mm case made of the company’s “high-intensity'' titanium, which is water-resistant to a robust 600 meters. It's been a mainstay in other Grand Seiko divers' models since, including the Ref. SLGA015 (above), from the sporty Evolution 9 collection, whose black patterned dial is inspired by the so-called Black Stream, one of the powerful ocean currents that flows around the Japanese archipelago.
Grand Seiko unveiled a new, manually winding Spring Drive movement, Caliber 9R02, in 2019 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the first Spring Drive watch. Its notable talking points are its two mainsprings, set in parallel inside a single barrel, which are linked to a newly developed Torque Return System. In practical terms, this system allows the movement to amass a power reserve of 84 hours and to deliver an accuracy of +/- 1 second per day. How does it accomplish this? Basically, Grand Seiko’s watchmakers discovered that when the mainspring in a standard mechanical movement has been fully wound, and the torque output is at its highest, a small but substantial portion of the available energy — about 30 percent — is wasted because it’s not needed to maintain the precision of the watch. The Torque Return System redirects this energy to rewind the mainspring, resulting in an increased power reserve. In Caliber 9R02, this system is activated for 48 hours after the mainspring has been fully wound.
The most noteworthy timepiece to contain Caliber 9R02 is the Ref. SBGZ001 “Snowflake” edition (above), launched the same year the movement debuted, a rare platinum-cased model that features the fan-favorite “snowflake” texture not only on its dial but on the case’s surfaces as well.
Another manually wound member of the Spring Drive family, Caliber 9R31, which powers special editions such as the SBGY007 “Omiwatari” from the Elegance collection, carries a 72-hour power reserve in its dual mainspring barrels. This movement’s aesthetic hallmark is the analog power reserve display positioned on its back side, joining an array of tempered blue screws. Its accuracy is the baseline Spring Drive standard +/- 1 second per day and +/- 15 seconds per month and it features a single dual-spring barrel like the one in its hand-wound sibling, Caliber 9R02, but minus the Torque Return System.
Like so many other ornate dials in the contemporary Grand Seiko collection, the Omiwatari dial (above), with its cool blue surface resembling cracked ice, has a distinctly Japanese story behind it: an ancient legend describes the Omiwatari as the frozen path trod by Shinto gods.
Tracing its genesis all the way back to 2004, Caliber 9R65 is the seed from which so many of the newer Spring Drive calibers have sprouted, and it remains ubiquitous throughout many models in the Grand Seiko line. The original 48-hour power reserve has been boosted to 72 hours and the accuracy stands at +/-15 seconds per month. Its presence in a Grand Seiko watch is often evident by the dial layout, which includes an elegantly framed date window at 3 o'clock and an analog power-reserve display at 8 o'clock.
Recently, Caliber 9R65 has animated models like the "Spring" edition from Grand Seiko's 2019 Four Seasons collection (Ref. SBGA413, above), with its Zaratsu-polished case and pink-hued, subtly textured dial with a motif that calls to mind blossoming Sakura, or flowers, as well as its accompanying "Winter" edition, whose dial sports the same texture but in a light titanium gray to represent snowy skies and landscapes.
One of the very first offspring (no pun intended) of the flagship Caliber 9R65, Caliber 9R66 features all the attributes of its parent, including the three-day power reserve, and also adds a fourth, independent hand to indicate a second time zone, which can be adjusted to the local time without stopping the movement. This caliber can be found inside Grand Seiko watches with a GMT function, including the SBGE271 “Kanro” and SBGE269 “Toji,” which hail from the brand’s 2021 Elegance GMT collection that pays tribute to — you guessed it — Japan’s four major seasons and their distinctive natural phenomena.
The model from the Evolution 9 series featured above (Ref. SBGE285) is one of the more recent notable releases to contain Caliber 9R66. Its 41mm case of High-Intensity titanium has a handsome hairline finish and its understated gray-toned "snowflake" dial reflects the "wintery morning mist" over the Japanese prefecture of Nagano. Caliber 9R66’s close cousin, Caliber 9R16, used in the ceramic-cased Grand Seiko Spring Drive Sports collection, incorporates the GMT functionality but boasts an enhanced +/-10-second monthly accuracy and a golden Grand Seiko lion emblem on the rotor.
Packing the most complications in a Spring Drive caliber to date, Caliber 9R86 debuted in 2007 and remains the most high-end option for chronograph enthusiasts in the collection; as yet, Grand Seiko has not produced an in-house chronograph caliber that is fully mechanical. Of course, it’s not just a chronograph: Caliber 9R86 is sort of a greatest-hits collection of Spring Drive movements that preceded it to the market, with the 24-hour GMT hand of Caliber 9R66 and the analog power-reserve indicator of Caliber 9R65 and its descendants, in addition to its +/-15 seconds of monthly rate efficiency and three-day power reserve. A bonus for the stopwatch function is the fraction-of-a-second accuracy offered by the glide-motion hands.
As you might surmise at this point, Caliber 9R96 is the souped-up version with enhanced +/-0.5 seconds daily accuracy and the Grand Seiko golden lion medallion. Caliber 9R86 animates most of the Chronograph GMT watches within the Grand Seiko Sport Collection, while the more exclusive 9R96 can be found in special editions like the SBGC229 Limited Edition (above), released in 2019 and conceived in a partnership between Grand Seiko and another historic Japanese brand, luxury automaker Nissan; in a bit of corporate serendipity, the year marked both 20 years of Spring Drive as well as 50 years of Nissan’s GT-R race car. Limited to 200 pieces, the watch features a color scheme inspired by the car's livery, with a 46.4mm High-Intensity titanium case, silvery white dial and strap, and a ceramic tachymeter bezel in Nissan's own "Bayside Blue."
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Very thorough item, which I enjoyed much!
The first quartz watch was invented in July 1967, in Neuchatel, Switzerland. The basic concept of Spring Drive was first invented in Switzerland in 1997 with the Salto watch from Asulab, the research laboratory of the Swatch Group.