March 28, 2024
IWC Ingenieur Automatic

There are plenty of watch series that have gone through dramatic changes: the Omega Constellation, IWC Portugieser, TAG Heuer Carrera — I am sure there are even those who will adamantly argue that Rolex Datejusts and Submariners have strayed too far from their original concepts. In some cases, in fact, it is these dramatic changes that have gave the respective brands their notoriety. When you think of Audemars Piguet, you don’t simply think back to dress watches and the Royal Oak; you think about the Offshore, too. When you think of the Omega Seamaster, you don’t only remember the smaller, delicate pieces the brand produced prior to 1957—you think about the epic divers that James Bond is still wearing today.

The modern (post-1976) IWC Ingenieur, above, is another one of these watches. Redesigned with the influence of horology legend Gérald Genta, in an effort to make the ‘50s-developed engineer’s watch more modern, the piece was characterized by an integrated bracelet, a rounded bezel with five screws, and a guilloché dial. It was a watch meant to rival the aforementioned Audemars Piguet Royal Oak and Patek Philippe Nautilus in style (two watches also designed by Genta and, coincidentally, both nicknamed “Jumbo”), but also to adhere to the main purpose set out for it back in 1954: legibility, anti-magnetism, and precision.
IWC Ingenieur Automatic
The modern Ingenieur collection includes plenty of masculine chronographs and date/time models, but at the forefront resides a flagship timepiece still recognizable to aficionados of the ‘70s-era Ingenieurs. The Reference 3239 (above), powered by an IWC-finished automatic ETA 2892, is housed in a 40-mm stainless steel case with an integrated bracelet and a rounded bezel with the familiar five screws; it now also has sleek, elongated crown guards. On the dial, there is the option for either black or silver-plating, and then a further choice of either rhodiumed or rose gold-plated accents. The piece has a date indicator at the 3 o’clock position, and tick marks for each of the hours with a double mark at the 12 o’clock above the modern IWC logo. If you are on the hunt, you’ll be able to find it for around $5,000, depending on the dealer.

Whenever I cover IWC watches, I keep in mind that it is the company’s tradition to overhaul entire collections every few years, normally at SIHH (as seen with the new Pilot’s watch collection this year). With this noted, it is no surprise that the modern Ingenieur is recognizable compared to the series’ historical pieces, but also not anything close to a direct re-creation. In terms of historical inspiration, all the key notes are still here: five screws securing the case, an integrated steel bracelet, a relatively thin case (10 mm), and anti-magnetic properties as a result of the soft inner cage protecting the automatic movement. However, IWC has since added crown guards, larger hands and hour markers, a raised bezel instead of the historically flat one, and, finally, a consistent (somewhat reflective) black or silver dial as compared to the graph-paper-like guilloché dial of the ‘70s.