Bangkok Post

FIFTY FATHOMS RISES TO NEW HEIGHTS

Blancpain’s first diver’s watch is immortalis­ed in new documentar­y

- STORY: NOKO

In the early 1950s when scuba diving was in its infancy, one of the amaJean-Jacques teur divers was Fiechthe ter, who wanted to master new sport in order to discover antiquitie­s lost under the sea. Fiechter’s underwater adventures led him to invent the Fifty Fathoms, whose story is engagingly retold in a new two-part documentar­y, which is in memory of his aunt Betty Fiechter (Blancpain’s CEO from 1932 until 1970) and Captain Robert “Bob” Maloubier OBE.

He was Blancpain’s co-CEO from 1950, and after his aunt’s retirement he led the Swiss company until 1980.

Narrated by Emmy Award-winning actor Peter Coyote, Fifty Fathoms traces important events in the creof ation and evolution the iconic diver’s watch over seven decades.

In Part 1 titled The History As Told By The Pioneer Who Created It, Fiechter shares his epiphany followdive ing an emergency ascent during a off the coast of France.

“The climb should have been slow but I climbed much faster, without taking the necessary precaution­s. So I ran the risk of having an attack of the bends, of having to stop my climb, and not being able to come out of it,” he says.

Fiechter realised that divers need — in addition to masks, fins and air tanks — a reliable timekeepin­g instrument.

“Scuba diving is an extraordin­ary sport, but you have to have the right equipment,” he says. “Those who owned a waterproof watch usually removed it as a precaution before going into the water because in the 50s, water resistance was not yet guaranO-ring teed. It was the adoption of the seal that changed perception­s of the watch’s water resistance.’’

His patented O-ring and crown seals ensured the water resistance while an ingenious rotating bezel allowed calculatio­n of the time underwater.

These inventions were incorporat­ed into the Fifty Fathoms created in 1952, which has ever since defined the genre of modern diving watches.

The name is a play on words inspired by full fathom five, a phrase from The Tempest by William Shakespear­e.

Fiechter’s ideas correspond­ed with the needs of the French Navy, elaborated in an interview with Captain Maloubier, who recalls the quest to find a rugged and reliable watch to equip a new combat diving corps.

To meet the additional requiremen­t, a soft iron anti-magnetism inner case shield was added to the Fifty Fathoms produced in 1953.

The film also recounts the saga of the US Navy’s multi-year testing programme that led to the selection of the Fifty Fathoms as its dive watch in the late 1950s, and its modificati­ons as MIL-SPEC versions.

Likewise, the German Navy had particular specificat­ions, fulfilled by the BUND No Rad model introduced in the mid-1960s.

The developmen­t of the Fifty Fathoms took place in the workshop in Villeret, where Jehan-Jacques Blancpain founded his eponymous business in 1735.

Located in northwest Switzerlan­d, the village was home to Blancpain for over 200 years. Following a change in ownership, operations moved to the Vallée de Joux and the focus turned to other models in the 1980s.

In 1992, the long-establishe­d maison became a part of the Swiss Corporatio­n for Microelect­ronics and Watchmakin­g Industries, known today as the Swatch Group.

The diver’s watches disappeare­d from the collection until the Fifty Fathoms re-emerged in a trilogy of watches related to sea, land and air and was launched in 1999.

The Fifty Fathoms then made a bigger comeback in the 21st century under the vision of Blancpain’s president and CEO Marc A. Hayek.

In Fifty Fathoms Part II Coming Back Alive, Hayek expresses how he fell in love with the vintage timepiece from the 1950s.

“The original was for me so beautiful. The beauty of it was just stunning, timeless,” he says. “We have to bring this beauty back alive. I just felt today we can do something that looks much closer to the original and has the advantages of today’s materials.”

Hayek is an avid diver, who made a splash by daringly introducin­g the Fifty Fathoms models underwater.

On the occasion of its 50th anniversar­y in 2003, Hayek plunged along with Captain Maloubier into Thailand’s waters, as a part of the launch of a commemorat­ive model featuring modern innovation­s.

Four years later, during a dive in the south of France, he presented another new model to Italian freediving champion Gianluca Genoni.

“We have to do it in a different way,” he says. “We have to launch our partnershi­p and Gianluca has to get his watch under the water and not on land.”

Over the years, the performanc­e of the Fifty Fathoms has been taken to the next levels through materials, movements and complicati­ons useful for diving and underwater exploratio­ns.

The film features exclusive footage from National Geographic’s Pristine Seas expedition­s and Laurent Ballesta’s Gombessa projects, both supported by Blancpain, as part of its Ocean Commitment initiative­s.

A series of limited editions have also been released so that owners can contribute to the funding of marine expedition­s and conservati­on projects.

“The Fifty Fathoms didn’t start as a watch. It started as a diving instrument. It is today again more than just a watch, with the Ocean Commitment,” says Hayek. “It’s about giving back something to the ocean and education to the people, and motivating people to protect its beauty and to preserve it.”

Fifty Fathoms can be viewed on Blancpain’s website and YouTube channel.

 ??  ?? Jean-Jacques Fiechter duringone of his first dives in the south of France.
Jean-Jacques Fiechter duringone of his first dives in the south of France.
 ??  ?? Laurent Ballesta’s Gombessa expedition­s focus on studying some of the rarest marine creatures.
Laurent Ballesta’s Gombessa expedition­s focus on studying some of the rarest marine creatures.
 ??  ?? Advertisin­g for the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms MIL-SPEC in the 1950s.
Advertisin­g for the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms MIL-SPEC in the 1950s.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Blancpain president and CEO Marc A. Hayek.
Blancpain president and CEO Marc A. Hayek.
 ??  ?? Captain Robert ‘Bob’ Maloubier OBE.
Captain Robert ‘Bob’ Maloubier OBE.
 ??  ?? Jean-Jacques Fiechter.
Jean-Jacques Fiechter.
 ??  ?? Fifty Fathoms from 1953.
Fifty Fathoms from 1953.

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