Caliber: In-House Caliber 4409Functions: Hours, minutes, seconds, Underground Tech chronograph with 12-hour and 30-minute totalizersDiameter: 32mmThickness: 6.82mmPower Reserve: 70 hoursWinding: AutomaticFrequency: 4 Hz (28,800 vph)Jewels: 40Total Components: 349Additional Details: This movement is a modified version of the caliber found in the CODE 11.59 chronograph, with the date complication removed.Certain Eastern-Arabic Day-Dates featured unique dial executions; you'll find a few in the Glamorous Day-Date sale, including the "Aladdin's Rose" and the "Brooklyn Bridge." In December 2020, Phillips sold the "Eye of Horus," a likely unique ref. 1804 in platinum with a remarkable asymmetrical guilloché dial. Now in 41 mm (the normal Globemaster is 39 mm), this new annual calendar features each month of the year in the 12 facets of the trademark pie-pan dial. Then, a thin blued hand points towards the current month, which then instantly jumps at month's end.What's more, Swiss memories are still fresh about the damage a Hong Kong slump can do to the watch business. In January 2015, Hong Kong fell into a severe slump: Swiss watch exports there dropped for 25 consecutive months. As Credit Hacking Hub a result, global watch exports fell 3% in 2015 and 10% in 2016. Then Hong Kong recovered, and the industry recovered: +3% in 2017, +6% in 2018. However, it may not be the case this time that, as goes Hong Kong, so goes the Swiss watch industry.Novak has a take-no-prisoners kind of game, while Hublot has certainly leapfrogged the traditional hierarchy of mechanical watchmaking in the past 15 years. To dwell on the comparison even further, Novak Djokovic played his first tour-level professional tennis tournament in 2004. That same year, Jean-Claude Biver joined Hublot as CEO, the first step in catapulting the company to its current enviable position in the watch world. Add the original owners personal dive log and youve got yourself one of the most interesting diving watches of the 1960s, and certainly one of the most well-preserved Seamasters on the market. Because of this, Phillips has placed an estimate of $59,500 and $119,000 on the Bio Driving watch, and we'll update this story once a the hammer has fallen and a final price has been reached.Sometimes, even with close observance and stopwatches, it was impossible to tell who crossed the finish line first. So Olympic timekeepers incorporated cameras capable of making that determination where the human eye failed after they developed the film, of course. In 1932, the "photo finish" was born.