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The Streamliner Flyback Chronograph packs an in-house flyback movement into an integrated-bracelet case at a price point that makes the Swiss establishment uncomfortable. At 42.3mm it wears larger than most Streamliners, but the case proportions carry it cleanly. For anyone serious about independent watchmaking, this is a hard reference to argue against.
H. Moser launched the Streamliner family in 2020 to prove that a small independent could build a fully integrated steel sports bracelet watch without borrowing a movement from a larger group. The Flyback Chronograph arrived as the most technically ambitious piece in the line, housing the HMC 902, a flyback-capable column-wheel chronograph developed entirely in-house at Schaffhausen.
Moser had been building its own calibers for years before the Streamliner existed, so the movement credentials were genuine rather than aspirational. The 6902-1200 debuted in steel with the fumé dials that have become a Moser signature, giving a reference with serious horological content a visual personality distinct from the broader sports watch crowd. It remains in production and continues to define what the independent sector can deliver at this specification level.
The integrated bracelet is well-made but sizing adjustments require returning the watch to Moser or an authorized service point, and the bracelet is not interchangeable with other Streamliner references. Fumé dials vary noticeably across production years and even within batches, so pre-owned buyers should inspect dial color carefully if consistency matters to them. The flyback function is genuine but the pusher placement takes some getting used to, and buyers expecting a traditional chronograph layout will need to relearn muscle memory.
Grey market pricing on new stock fluctuates more than on comparable references from larger brands, so patience usually rewards buyers who wait for the right moment. Water resistance is rated at 120 meters, adequate for most use but below the 200-meter threshold some sport watch buyers expect.
New retail runs roughly CHF 28,900 in steel, which positions the Streamliner Flyback well below comparable integrated-bracelet chronographs from Patek or Audemars Piguet while offering fully in-house construction. Pre-owned examples trade at moderate discounts to retail, reflecting steady demand and Moser's growing collector following. The reference has not appreciated sharply, which means buyers today are getting the specification at a fair price rather than paying a speculative premium.
The HMC 902 is serviced exclusively through H. Moser's Schaffhausen manufacture or its authorized network. Moser quotes a service interval of approximately five years for the chronograph mechanism, and the flyback complication adds time and cost compared to a simple movement service.
Parts availability is strong for a watch of this age, but independent watchmakers outside the authorized network should not be expected to source proprietary HMC 902 components.
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Integrated bracelet seamlessness and instantaneous flyback reset are the two definitive checks.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| bracelet | Case-bracelet integration | Seamless visual and physical integration between case and bracelet; no gap at interface | Gap at case-bracelet interface; non-genuine or replacement bracelet |
| case | Flyback pusher reset | Flyback reset instantaneous on pusher press; chronograph hand snaps back immediately | Non-instantaneous reset; flyback mechanism needs service |
| caseback | HMC 902 movement | HMC 902 in-house flyback movement visible through caseback | Non-in-house movement; movement swap |