Editorial
The DK105 is the only Damasko with an in-house movement, pairing the A26 chronograph caliber with the brand's ice-hardened steel case. Forty millimeters, no concessions, and every major component built in Amberg. If you want the full Damasko argument in a single watch, this is it.
Damasko introduced the A26 caliber after years of supplying precision components to the broader German watchmaking industry, and the DK105 was the vehicle for that debut. The A26 is a column-wheel flyback chronograph movement developed entirely in-house, which puts Damasko in genuine manufacture territory rather than the modifier-of-ETA category most German tool-watch makers occupy. The ice-hardening process on the case, developed from Damasko's background in industrial precision engineering, brings the steel to roughly 1,500 Vickers hardness, far beyond what conventional stainless achieves.
The DK105 has been in continuous production since 2014 with minimal revision, which reflects confidence in the design rather than neglect of it.
The A26 is a flyback chronograph and operates differently from a standard push-piece-reset movement. Buyers unfamiliar with flyback operation sometimes report feeling like something is wrong on their first use. The bracelet options Damasko sells are well-made but sized for narrow wrists, and aftermarket alternatives that fit the lug width correctly are limited.
Production is slow and allocation through authorized dealers is genuinely constrained, so gray-market pricing during peaks can reach new-retail or above. Service intervals for the A26 are not yet well-documented in the independent watchmaker community given how recently the caliber appeared, so factor in the likelihood that any service will go back to Damasko directly.