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The Portofino Chronograph 42mm is IWC's attempt to bring stopwatch function into a slim, formal package without the bulk that usually comes with it. It succeeds visually: the dial is clean, the case proportions sit closer to a dress watch than a sport chrono, and the sunburst silver dial reads well at dinner. Collectors treat it as a capable daily wearer that covers more ground than a pure dress piece, without demanding the premium of IWC's in-house movements.
IWC introduced the current 42mm Portofino Chronograph in 2014, housed in reference IW391036, a steel case with a silver dial, small seconds at 9 o'clock, and date at 3. The movement is the Valjoux 7750 (caliber 79320 in IWC's designation), a proven Swiss ebauche that IWC did not develop and does not pretend otherwise. The 7750 base means the pusher architecture and layout are shared with countless other chronographs, which is a known trade-off for a brand in this tier.
IWC has offered the Portofino Chrono in several case metals and dial colors over the years, including rose gold and blue dial variants that carry a significant premium. The steel silver-dial IW391036 has remained the entry point and the most available reference throughout the production run.
Inspect the pushers carefully: the 7750 is robust but chronograph column-wheel wear shows up in soft or inconsistent pusher feel, and replacement parts are inexpensive but labor is not. Dial condition is everything on the silver sunburst version; moisture ingress or storage under UV creates patchy fading that is irreversible without a full redial, which destroys originality and value. Check the case edges for polishing, since sellers often buff the lugs on returned or worn pieces, rounding what should be crisp transitions between the polished and brushed surfaces.
Confirm the reference number against the movement: the 79320 should be present on the rotor; a swapped or undisclosed service movement is occasionally seen on grey-market pieces. Bracelet stretch on examples sold on the original strap is not a concern, but buyers receiving a bracelet should check clasp play, as aftermarket bracelets are common on this reference.
Grey market prices for the IW391036 in steel run roughly $4,500 to $5,800 depending on condition and whether box and papers are present; retail is around $7,900 so the secondary discount is meaningful. Rose gold variants (IW391022 and similar) hold closer to retail and sometimes exceed it in excellent condition with original strap. The 7750 base keeps a ceiling on collector enthusiasm compared to IWC pieces with in-house calibers, so the steel chrono is unlikely to appreciate; buyers should treat it as use value rather than an investment.
Demand is steady but not deep, meaning patient buyers find clean examples without urgency.
The movement is caliber 79320, IWC's finishing of the Valjoux 7750 base. IWC recommends service every five to seven years; expect $600 to $1,000 at an authorized center, or $400 to $650 at a competent independent who knows the 7750. Parts availability is excellent and will remain so for the foreseeable future, which is one genuine advantage of the 7750 platform over proprietary movements.
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Verify the IWC-signed rotor and IWC movement finishing through the caseback; a generic ETA 7750 without IWC decoration indicates a movement swap.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | IWC-signed rotor and Cal. 79320 movement finishing | IWC-signed rotor visible through caseback; IWC movement finishing and decoration on bridges; Cal. 79320 identity confirmed | Generic ETA 7750 without IWC signing or decoration; unsigned rotor; no IWC-specific finishing |
| dial | Portofino dress chronograph dial layout | Clean dress-oriented dial with 3-register chronograph layout; Portofino case proportions appropriate for this movement | Dial layout inconsistent with Portofino specifications; any non-standard sub-register configuration |
| case | Portofino round case with pushers | Clean round Portofino case; both chronograph pushers operating cleanly with no binding |
| Either pusher binding or sticking; case shape inconsistent with Portofino line |