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The Royale Paris Manual is Péquignet's purest expression of what the brand can do with a movement. It runs the in-house Calibre Royal Manuel with a 100-hour power reserve, which means one wind per week with a comfortable buffer to spare. At 39.5mm in steel, it sits at a size that works for dress wear without disappearing on a larger wrist.
Péquignet is a French independent that has been building watches in Morteau, in the Doubs region near the Swiss border, since 1973. The brand developed the Calibre Royal movement family in-house, a genuine achievement for a company of its size. The Royale Paris line sits at the top of their current catalog, and the Manual variant arrived as the more watchmaking-forward option alongside the automatic version.
Morteau's location in the Franche-Comté places Péquignet within the traditional French watch corridor, though the brand has always operated independently of the Swiss industry. The 100-hour reserve on the Manuel is not marketing padding; it reflects a serious engineering choice for a hand-wound caliber aimed at collectors who wind on a schedule.
Péquignet has had periods of ownership instability over the decades, and pre-2010 examples may have different movement suppliers than current production. Confirm the reference number is PRG39-02 and that the dial states Calibre Royal Manuel if you want the in-house movement. The brand's retail presence outside France is thin, which makes pre-purchase hands-on assessment difficult for international buyers.
Resale liquidity is low relative to Swiss peers, so buy this because you want the watch, not because you expect to exit easily. Service infrastructure outside France is limited; factor in potential shipping costs to Morteau for future servicing.
The PRG39-02 is priced below what a comparable Swiss in-house manual-wind at this complication level would cost, which is a genuine value argument for collectors who do the research. New retail pricing positions it in the accessible serious-watchmaking tier. Pre-owned examples are scarce rather than cheap, partly because few owners sell them and partly because the secondary market for French independents is thin.
Patience is required if you want one at a discount.
The Calibre Royal Manuel is serviced by Péquignet directly in Morteau, France. Find an authorized service center before purchase, as independent watchmakers with documented experience on this caliber are rare outside France. Standard service intervals for a manual-wind of this type run every five to seven years under normal use.
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The Royale Paris Manual must deliver at least 80h actual run time from a full wind; substantially less indicates a worn mainspring or regulation issue.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| movement | Calibre Royal Manuel 100h in-house architecture | In-house Calibre Royal Manuel visible through caseback; manual-wind | Non-Calibre-Royal-Manuel architecture; movement swap |
| dial | Power reserve indicator at full wind | Power reserve indicator reads full after complete winding | Indicator does not reach full; winding mechanism fault or worn mainspring |
| movement | Actual run time from full wind | At least 80h actual run time from full wind | Less than 80h actual run time; worn mainspring or regulation issue |