Editorial
The Triple Split is one of the most mechanically ambitious chronographs ever put into production. It extends the classic rattrapante complication to all three time registers at once, letting you capture split times across hours, minutes, and seconds simultaneously. Almost no buyer will ever use it to its full capability, but that is not really the point.
A. Lange and Söhne introduced the Triple Split in 2018, building on decades of rattrapante development that began with the Doppel Chronograph in the 1990s. The movement, caliber L132.1, was developed entirely in-house and required years of engineering work to solve the synchronization problem across three separate split registers.
At the time of release it was the first wristwatch ever to offer simultaneous split-second capture at the hours, minutes, and seconds level. The case is 43.2mm in white gold with the characteristic Lange three-quarter plate and blued screws visible through the sapphire caseback. Production is limited and unhurried, consistent with how Lange approaches any complication of this difficulty.
White gold in this size and complexity puts the Triple Split firmly above $400,000 new, and the secondary market reflects that scarcity without offering meaningful discounts. Condition matters enormously: the pusher mechanism and rattrapante components are under real mechanical stress during use, so inspect any pre-owned example for evidence of hard service or amateur lubrication. The dial configuration, with split registers for all three hands, can read as busy to eyes accustomed to simpler chronographs; this is worth confirming in person before committing.
Servicing requires a Lange authorized center or an independent with documented experience on the L132.1 specifically. Any example that has been polished loses resale value significantly, and re-polishing is common on watches that have passed through multiple hands.