Editorial
The FB 2RE puts acoustic resonance into a 38mm steel package at a fraction of what F.P. Journe's Résonance commands. Two balance wheels share a resonance bridge and naturally synchronize, giving the watch exceptional rate stability without electronic regulation.
For a collector who wants real horological substance in a wearable size, very little at this price level competes.
François-Baptiste is a brand that emerged from the orbit of F.P. Journe's Geneva atelier, applying the same serious approach to complications to a more accessible price point. The FB 2RE launched around 2020, making it one of only a handful of resonance wristwatches ever brought to commercial production.
The resonance principle dates to Antide Janvier and Abraham-Louis Breguet in the 18th century: two oscillators coupled through a bridge will synchronize and mutually correct each other's rate errors. Most watchmakers have left the concept as a curiosity; FB built a working hand-wound caliber around it in a 38mm steel case sized for the wrist rather than the display cabinet.
The market for FB 2RE is thin, which makes pricing opaque and resale unpredictable. Buyers should be cautious about examples that show signs of amateur service, because the resonance bridge requires precise setup; a poorly regulated resonance watch delivers no rate benefit at all. The hand-wound movement needs winding every day or two, and skipping that routine can disrupt the synchronized oscillator relationship until the watch settles back in.
Dial variants exist, so confirm you are looking at the specific reference and dial you want rather than assuming all 2RE examples are equivalent. The brand's limited dealer network means pre-sale inspection may require shipping, which adds friction to the due-diligence process.