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The Lindbergh Hour Angle Watch is a functional celestial navigation instrument that Longines developed with Charles Lindbergh himself in 1931, based on the calculations he used to correct his position during the transatlantic flight. The oversized 47.5mm case exists for a reason: the dial and rotating bezel work together to compute longitude from a time sight on the sun or stars, a method still taught in offshore navigation. Collectors who want a watch with a genuine technical purpose, not merely a complicated one, find this ref hard to ignore.
Longines reissued the Hour Angle Watch in 1987 as part of its heritage revival program, drawing directly from the 1931 original. The current ref L2.678.4.11.0 runs the L699, which is Longines' designation for the ETA A07.L01, a reliable workhorse automatic with no pretension toward manufacture status. Earlier revival examples from the late 1980s and 1990s used different ETA-based calibers before the line settled into its current spec.
The watch has stayed largely unchanged in dimensions and function across the revival era, with only dial colorways and strap options varying by market. The steel case with silver dial (the L2.678.4.11.0 configuration) is the closest read to the original instrument aesthetic.
The rotating bezel is the most inspection-critical component: confirm the detent is crisp and the markings are fully legible, as worn or loose bezels are not trivial to source. The large crown at 3 o'clock and the additional bezel-setting crown should both move smoothly without play; either crown showing roughness or stiffness points to deferred service. Verify the caseback engraving and the dial printing are consistent with authentic Longines production, because this ref attracts tribute and franken pieces given the collector mystique around the Lindbergh name.
The 30m water resistance rating is nominal for a watch of this age and design; any example without documented pressure testing should be treated as splash-resistant only. Check that the hour-angle scale on the bezel aligns correctly with the minute track when the bezel is zeroed.
The Hour Angle Watch occupies an unusual market position: it is not expensive by luxury watch standards (new retail sits around $2,000 to $2,500 depending on market), which means used examples trade close to retail rather than carrying a significant secondary premium. Clean examples with original straps and box-and-papers hold value better than stripped ones. The rare early 1987-1988 reissue pieces with the original dial typography occasionally attract collector attention and trade slightly above later production.
Precious metal variants exist but are genuinely niche; steel is the correct reference for anyone buying this watch for what it does rather than what it is made of.
The L699 (ETA A07.L01) is straightforward to service at any competent independent watchmaker and does not require a Longines service center. Expect a full service interval of 5 to 7 years under normal use, with costs typically running $300 to $500 at an independent. Longines factory service is available but priced higher and rarely necessary given the caliber's wide aftermarket support.
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Functional navigation instrument; the rotating crown at 2 o'clock and chapter ring must operate correctly or the watch is incomplete.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Hour angle scale legibility and centering | Crisp, legible hour angle scale on the outer ring; scale is uniformly spaced and correctly centered around the dial | Blurred or faded scale text; scale that shifts position around the dial; any gap or overlap in the degree markings |
| crown | Rotating crown at 2 o'clock function | Crown at 2 turns smoothly throughout its full range and drives the chapter ring without slipping | Crown that slips without moving the ring; crown that binds or requires excessive force; ring that moves in only one direction |
| case | Chapter ring engagement and alignment |
| Inner chapter ring aligns with the hour angle scale and rotates continuously when driven by the 2 o'clock crown |
| Ring that does not rotate; ring with scratches or chips from improper tools; misaligned ring that cannot be zeroed correctly |
| movement | Cal. L699 function and finishing | Movement visible through caseback shows Longines finishing; runs smoothly at 21,600bph | Generic ETA movement without Longines finishing; movement running rough or stopping intermittently |