Editorial
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.