Editorial
The 2023 Ingenieur Automatic 40mm is IWC's return to a design Gerald Genta drew before the Royal Oak, restored to its original proportions after the line spent years adrift in oversized territory. The IW328901 brings back the five-spoke dial and radial graining in a 40mm steel case with a soft-iron inner cage that meets antimagnetic spec , a practical tool-watch pedigree at a price that does not require a waiting list.
IWC introduced the Ingenieur in 1955 as a professional antimagnetic watch, with Gerald Genta reworking the case into its defining form in 1976. That 1976 design is the direct ancestor of this 2023 relaunch, which IWC explicitly positioned as a return to original proportions after the SL-era watches grew to 46mm and the line was discontinued around 2017. The 2023 generation launched with reference IW328901 in steel and IW328902 in a steel/titanium combination, both powered by Caliber 32111.
A separate Ingenieur Automatic 40 Titanium ref (IW328903) followed shortly after. No precious-metal or high-complication variants have shipped as of 2026, keeping the current range focused and entry-accessible.
The Sellita SW300-1 base of Caliber 32111 is reliable but not exclusive, and IWC does not disclose the movement's origin in marketing materials , factor that into any comparison against in-house competitors at similar price points. Verify the soft-iron antimagnetic cage is intact if buying pre-owned; a dropped or heavily impacted case can compromise it without obvious external damage. The five-spoke dial is prone to showing fingerprints and scratches on the applied indices under strong light, so inspect the dial closely under a loupe before purchase.
Bracelet end-links on early production pieces developed minor play sooner than expected; ask the seller about service history or stretch on the bracelet. Confirm you are buying a 2023-generation reference and not an older SL-era piece being described loosely as an "Ingenieur 40."