Editorial
The Meister Hand-Winding is one of the only new manual-wind dress watches you can buy for under a thousand dollars, and it earns that position honestly. At 37.7mm it sits where a dress watch should, and the open caseback puts the pocket-watch-derived Peseux 7001 balance on full display. Wind it each morning, watch the slow sweep of that seconds hand, and you have a daily ritual most modern watches have forgotten.
Junghans built its reputation across the twentieth century as Germany's answer to Swiss volume production, making everything from alarm clocks to precision timers for Olympic competitions. The Meister line draws from that mid-century catalog, revived with clean Bauhaus geometry and restrained typography that reflects the brand's Schramberg roots. The 027/3201.02 arrived in 2011 and has remained essentially unchanged, a mark of confidence in a design that did not need improvement.
Junghans sources the J815.1, their designation for the ETA Peseux 7001, a movement originally developed for pocket watches and later adapted to wristwatches precisely because its large balance delivers strong amplitude without a complex architecture. That lineage is visible the moment you flip the case.
The Peseux 7001 beats at 18,000 vph, slower than the 28,800 you find in most contemporary movements, which means the seconds hand ticks in broad, deliberate steps rather than gliding. Some buyers expect a smooth sweep and are caught off guard. The acrylic crystal on this reference scratches more readily than mineral or sapphire, so carry it with that in mind and budget for a periodic polish.
Crown feel is adequate but not jewel-like, and the winding experience is workmanlike rather than pleasurable. Finally, because the case is a modest 37.7mm, buyers accustomed to watches 40mm and above sometimes find the proportions smaller on the wrist than they anticipated from photos.