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The Streamliner Centre Seconds is Moser's answer to a question the brand spent years resisting: what does an integrated-bracelet sport watch look like when an independent manufacture builds it from scratch? The result is 40mm of brushed and polished steel, a fumé dial in Moser's signature fading gradient, and the in-house HMC 200 automatic powering it. It launched in 2020 and gave collectors an entry point into genuine manufacture sport-watch territory at a price that undercuts the established Swiss houses by a meaningful margin.
H. Moser and Cie has operated from Schaffhausen since its 19th-century origins, but the modern independent chapter began in earnest after the Meylan family acquisition and the subsequent build-out of in-house caliber production. For most of its modern run, Moser focused on dress and neo-vintage pieces with fumé dials and minimalist cases.
The Streamliner changed that in 2020, introducing a bracelet developed specifically for this line, not adapted from an existing strap lug, and a case profile with integrated lugs that flows into the links without a visible break. The HMC 200 was built to fit this case and carries a 72-hour power reserve with a peripheral rotor so the dial stays unobstructed. It was a deliberate move to prove Moser could compete in the integrated-bracelet category without outsourcing the movement or the bracelet engineering.
The bracelet on early production Streamliners drew some criticism for finishing quality at the clasp, particularly micro-adjustment feel relative to what competitors offer at similar price points. Inspect any pre-owned example carefully at the clasp mechanism before buying. The fumé dials are striking but color varies noticeably across production runs and even within the same color family, so what you see in photos may not match what arrives.
Moser has introduced the Streamliner in a wide variety of dial colors and limited editions, which creates collector confusion around what the base reference actually is. The 6200-1200 specifically refers to the steel fumé blue or fumé green variants, so verify the exact dial before purchase if color matters to you. Resale demand is growing but thinner than for Rolex or AP, meaning liquidity is limited if you need to exit quickly.
New retail sits in the $20,000 to $24,000 range depending on configuration, which puts it well below the Royal Oak or Nautilus in steel. Pre-owned pricing has been stable rather than speculative, typically trading at a modest discount to retail on the secondary market. That stability reflects genuine collector demand rather than flipping activity, which is a healthier sign for long-term value than a watch that spikes and crashes.
The HMC 200 is an in-house caliber serviced exclusively by H. Moser authorized service centers or the manufacture directly in Schaffhausen. Service intervals are recommended at approximately five to seven years, and because the movement is proprietary, independent watchmakers without manufacturer parts access cannot perform a full service.
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The Streamliner Centre Seconds pairs the HMC 200 movement and fume dial of the Endeavour family with a cushion-shaped case and a fully integrated in-house bracelet. The bracelet-to-case junction and the cushion case shape are the two primary identifiers versus the Endeavour line.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| bracelet | Integrated bracelet fit and finishing | Bracelet flows seamlessly from the lugs with no gap or step; alternating brushed and polished link surfaces; the clasp bears the Moser logo; links are solid, not hollow | Gap or misalignment at the lug-bracelet junction; uniform finish across all links; hollow or light links; clasp without Moser markings |
| dial | Fume dial with no text | Gradient fume with no brand or model text; applied hour markers; date at 6 if present on the variant; color consistent with documented Streamliner palette (blue, grey, green) | Any text on the dial; gradient inconsistency; incorrect color for the claimed variant |
The Streamliner is Moser's integrated-bracelet sport watch. The fumé dial carries over from the Endeavour but with a date window and a bracelet machined from the same steel billet as the case. Cal. HMC 200 is shared with the Endeavour family.
Factor in longer turnaround times if you are outside Europe and need to route the watch to Switzerland.
| case | Cushion case shape and water resistance | Distinctively cushion-shaped case (not round); 40mm; 120m water resistance; screw-down crown; case height 10.5mm | Round case being presented as Streamliner; push-pull crown instead of screw-down; water resistance inconsistent with specs |
| movement | HMC 200 peripheral rotor | In-house HMC 200 with peripheral winding; 72h power reserve; Moser signed and numbered | Central rotor instead of peripheral; non-Moser movement base; unsigned |
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