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Sure, rotating bezels look great.
With a variety of colors and beautiful complications painted and ingrained into their surfaces, they add awesome aesthetic appeal.
However, chances are that half the people who own a luxury watches with a rotating bezel don’t actually know all that much about them.
Rotating bezels are designed to help measure everything from dive times to regatta races – granted, the later is not a feature you’re bound to use daily.
Nonetheless, we think you should understand how rotating bezels work and how to properly use them.
So, let’s get started!
The rotating bezel on the Rolex GMT-Master is marked with a 24-hour scale, which allows it to be used to reference a second time zone.
In the vast majority of instances, the bezel is entirely separate from your watch’s movement.
A bezel is the outer ring of metal – sometimes ceramic – that surrounds the face of your watch and its crystal.
Since it is located outside of the watch, it allows the primary functionality of the timepiece to stay the same while still allowing the wearer to reference something other than just the hours, minutes, and seconds of the day.
Like we mentioned above, rotating bezels are used for everything from timing deep dives to displaying secondary time zones, to even configuring countdown timers for boat races.
The rotating, red and blue “Pepsi” bezel on the latest Rolex GMT-Master II ref.
126710 is constructed from Rolex’s proprietary ceramic material.
There are also three types of rotating bezels:
The Ring Command bezel on the Rolex Yacht-Master II is linked to its internal movement, which allows it to be used to set the watch’s adjustable countdown timer.
Underneath the handsome ceramic or metal bezel, there are usually a number of different parts that connect it to a watch and provide it with is motion and functionality.
Depending on the type of bezel and the features that it offers, these parts can range from small leaf springs to specialized washers, and can significantly differ from one watch to the next – even if the bezels on the two watches offer identical functionality.
Traditionally, it has often been small springs that provide rotating bezels with their ratcheting action and unidirectional motion; however on the most recent incarnation of the Rolex Submariner – the version with a ceramic bezel insert, this system has been replaced by 4 spring-loaded rollers, one of which is angled on top to prevent clockwise motion.
Older Rolex Submariner watches were fitted with bidirectional bezels; however the latest models all have unidirectional bezels as an added safety measure.
Measuring time with a rotating bezel is actually a lot easier than you might suspect – it just requires a little bit of knowledge about how they are intended to work.
With a unidirectional bezel, you simply spin the bezel counterclockwise so that you can count elapsed time – like how much time you have spent submerged while diving.
The added assurance that the bezel can only move one way means that even if you do manage to knock it out of place, it will only ever appear as though you spent more time underwater, not less (which could potentially be a fatal mistake).
On the other hand, a bidirectional rotating bezel moves both ways, allowing you to either track the amount of elapsed time or count down from a set time (up to 60 minutes).
Simply rotate the bezel clockwise or counter clockwise, aligning either the 0-minute marker or the desired minute value indicator (if using it as a countdown timer) with the minute hand of your watch, when you are ready to start measuring the time – simple as that!
The bi-directional rotating timing bezel on the Rolex Yacht-Master can be used to time events up to 1 hour in duration.
Lastly, there are those tricky Ring Command bezels.
These require a bit more effort to properly figure out since each will function differently depending on the additional features offered by their respective watches.
At the present time, Rolex only fits the Ring Command bezel on the two most complex watches in their catalog, and in each instance, the bezel both looks and functions differently.
On the Rolex Yacht-Master II, the Ring Command bezel is marked with a prominent 0-10 scale, and is used for setting the watch’s adjustable regatta timer for use either before or during a boat race.
However, the Ring Command bezel on the Sky-Dweller is of Rolex’s traditional fluted design, and is not used for measuring time at all, but rather it is used in conjunction with the winding crown to permit facilitated adjustment of the annual calendar complication on the Caliber 9001 movement.
At the present time, the Yacht-Master II and Sky-Dweller are the only Rolex watches that are fitted with Rind Command bezels.
Sure, rotating bezels look great.
With a variety of colors and beautiful complications painted and ingrained into their surfaces, they add awesome aesthetic appeal.
However, chances are that half the people who own a luxury watches with a rotating bezel don’t actually know all that much about them.
Rotating bezels are designed to help measure everything from dive times to regatta races – granted, the later is not a feature you’re bound to use daily.
Nonetheless, we think you should understand how rotating bezels work and how to properly use them.
So, let’s get started!
The rotating bezel on the Rolex GMT-Master is marked with a 24-hour scale, which allows it to be used to reference a second time zone.
In the vast majority of instances, the bezel is entirely separate from your watch’s movement.
A bezel is the outer ring of metal – sometimes ceramic – that surrounds the face of your watch and its crystal.
Since it is located outside of the watch, it allows the primary functionality of the timepiece to stay the same while still allowing the wearer to reference something other than just the hours, minutes, and seconds of the day.
Like we mentioned above, rotating bezels are used for everything from timing deep dives to displaying secondary time zones, to even configuring countdown timers for boat races.
The rotating, red and blue “Pepsi” bezel on the latest Rolex GMT-Master II ref.
126710 is constructed from Rolex’s proprietary ceramic material.
There are also three types of rotating bezels:
The Ring Command bezel on the Rolex Yacht-Master II is linked to its internal movement, which allows it to be used to set the watch’s adjustable countdown timer.
Underneath the handsome ceramic or metal bezel, there are usually a number of different parts that connect it to a watch and provide it with is motion and functionality.
Depending on the type of bezel and the features that it offers, these parts can range from small leaf springs to specialized washers, and can significantly differ from one watch to the next – even if the bezels on the two watches offer identical functionality.
Traditionally, it has often been small springs that provide rotating bezels with their ratcheting action and unidirectional motion; however on the most recent incarnation of the Rolex Submariner – the version with a ceramic bezel insert, this system has been replaced by 4 spring-loaded rollers, one of which is angled on top to prevent clockwise motion.
Older Rolex Submariner watches were fitted with bidirectional bezels; however the latest models all have unidirectional bezels as an added safety measure.
Measuring time with a rotating bezel is actually a lot easier than you might suspect – it just requires a little bit of knowledge about how they are intended to work.
With a unidirectional bezel, you simply spin the bezel counterclockwise so that you can count elapsed time – like how much time you have spent submerged while diving.
The added assurance that the bezel can only move one way means that even if you do manage to knock it out of place, it will only ever appear as though you spent more time underwater, not less (which could potentially be a fatal mistake).
On the other hand, a bidirectional rotating bezel moves both ways, allowing you to either track the amount of elapsed time or count down from a set time (up to 60 minutes).
Simply rotate the bezel clockwise or counter clockwise, aligning either the 0-minute marker or the desired minute value indicator (if using it as a countdown timer) with the minute hand of your watch, when you are ready to start measuring the time – simple as that!
The bi-directional rotating timing bezel on the Rolex Yacht-Master can be used to time events up to 1 hour in duration.
Lastly, there are those tricky Ring Command bezels.
These require a bit more effort to properly figure out since each will function differently depending on the additional features offered by their respective watches.
At the present time, Rolex only fits the Ring Command bezel on the two most complex watches in their catalog, and in each instance, the bezel both looks and functions differently.
On the Rolex Yacht-Master II, the Ring Command bezel is marked with a prominent 0-10 scale, and is used for setting the watch’s adjustable regatta timer for use either before or during a boat race.
However, the Ring Command bezel on the Sky-Dweller is of Rolex’s traditional fluted design, and is not used for measuring time at all, but rather it is used in conjunction with the winding crown to permit facilitated adjustment of the annual calendar complication on the Caliber 9001 movement.
At the present time, the Yacht-Master II and Sky-Dweller are the only Rolex watches that are fitted with Rind Command bezels.

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¿Are you not a Daxdi member yet?

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