Editorial
MB&F solved a real problem with the Flying T: when your arm is at rest, a conventional dial is tilted away from you. The LM FlyingT tilts the time display 50 degrees toward the wearer, so reading the watch in the natural raised-arm position requires no awkward wrist rotation. It is clever without being theatrical, and at 38.5mm in titanium it is one of the few MB&F pieces that sits quietly on a smaller wrist.
The LM FlyingT debuted in 2019 as the smallest watch in the Legacy Machine family, developed by MB&F with independent watchmaker Stephen McDonnell. The tilted-dial concept draws on the ergonomics of how a watch is actually worn: the time display is oriented 50 degrees from horizontal so it faces the wearer directly when the arm is raised to reading position. McDonnell built the movement to place the flying tourbillon at the top of the dial architecture, where it acts as both a regulator and a visual anchor.
The case is titanium throughout, keeping weight low on what MB&F positioned as a more wearable entry point into the Legacy Machine line. It remains in regular production, one of the brand's more consistent catalog anchors.
The tilted display is genuinely functional, but it takes a few days of wear before reading the time stops feeling slightly foreign. Buyers who handle one at a boutique for five minutes sometimes underestimate the adjustment period. The flying tourbillon is exposed and positioned high on the dial, making crystal integrity worth inspecting closely on any pre-owned example.
Titanium cases scratch readily and MB&F's finishing is detailed enough that surface wear is visible earlier than on brushed steel alternatives. The 38.5mm diameter suits many wrists, but the case height is substantial due to the tilted movement architecture, so check wrist clearance before committing. Service intervals and costs are in line with other McDonnell-caliber pieces: budget accordingly and plan on authorized service only, as independent access to parts is limited.