
The Master Control Chronograph Calendar combines in-house flyback chronograph with a calendar display; secondary prices are firm because few brands offer this complication density at this price tier.
The Master Control Chronograph Calendar pairs a flyback column-wheel chronograph with a full annual calendar in a 40mm steel case that most collectors can actually wear daily. It runs JLC's in-house Caliber 759, a movement that earns genuine respect rather than borrowed prestige. For the price, the complication density is hard to match from any manufacturer at this level.
JLC introduced the current Q4138420 in 2020 as part of the refreshed Master Control line, bringing slimmer lugs and a slightly more restrained dial compared to its predecessors. The Caliber 759 is a column-wheel flyback movement built entirely in-house at Le Sentier, with a 65-hour power reserve and the annual calendar module integrated at the factory rather than sourced from a complications specialist. The annual calendar mechanism advances automatically through 30- and 31-day months, requiring only a single manual correction at the end of February each year.
Earlier Master Control chronographs used the Cal. 751 without the annual calendar function, so buyers should confirm the reference number carefully when shopping the pre-2020 market. The Q4138420 is a current-production reference with no significant mid-run variants beyond dial color options.
Confirm the reference number Q4138420 precisely, as the Master Control family has overlapping chronograph references across generations and the annual calendar is not universal to the line. The pushers and column-wheel mechanism are sensitive to operation while the watch is not running; ask sellers whether the chronograph was ever actuated while the watch was stopped, which can cause false starts and eventual wear to the column-wheel detents. Annual calendar modules accumulate service needs faster than simple date mechanisms, so verify when the movement was last serviced and whether the calendar corrector was used properly.
Inspect the case for crown and pusher wear, particularly the flyback pusher at 4 o'clock, which takes the most mechanical stress. Dials are complex with multiple subdials and calendar windows, so examine under magnification for any moisture intrusion or printing wear around the apertures.
New retail sits around $14,500 USD, and the secondary market has generally held in the $10,500 to $13,000 range for clean examples with box and papers. Unlike Patek or AP chronographs, this reference does not command meaningful premiums over retail and frequently trades below it, which is genuinely good news for buyers. Unworn or lightly worn examples with original papers carry a $500 to $1,000 premium over honest used pieces.
The annual calendar function adds real value here relative to comparable flyback chronographs without it, but the market has not fully priced that in, making this one of the stronger value positions in complicated steel sports-adjacent watches.
JLC Caliber 759 carries a recommended service interval of approximately 7 to 10 years for normal use, though the annual calendar module may warrant attention sooner if the watch sees daily wear across season changes. Factory service in the United States runs roughly $1,500 to $2,500 depending on what parts require replacement, with independent specialists who hold JLC experience charging somewhat less. Budget for calendar module inspection at each service, as the additional mechanical complexity of the annual calendar mechanism adds labor time beyond a standard chronograph overhaul.
Community + OSINT signals haven’t landed for this reference yet. We don’t publish a rating against zero signal — the number would mean nothing. Editorial body + caliber + market value still surface above; ratings appear once the signal corpus does.
The flyback function must reset and restart instantaneously; any hesitation in the lower pusher indicates chronograph service.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| crown | Flyback chronograph pusher function | Lower pusher at the 10-position resets and restarts the chronograph instantaneously in a single press | Any hesitation between reset and restart; chronograph hands that do not return to zero cleanly |
| caseback | Cal. 759 movement with complex bridge layout | Cal. 759 visible with column wheel; bridge layout consistent with JLC documentation | Any caliber other than 759; movement bridge layout inconsistent with JLC Cal. 759 |
| dial | Full calendar indication accuracy | Day, date, and month apertures showing correct current values; month advance correct at each month-end | Any calendar aperture showing incorrect date; month indicator that fails to advance at month-end |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.