Editorial
The Altiplano Automatic 38mm exists because Piaget spent sixty years asking how thin a movement could actually get. The 1200P caliber answers that question at 2.35mm, making the entire watch 5.25mm thick , a number that sounds made up until you hold one. Rose gold, 38mm, and genuinely flat: this is what ultra-thin looks like when a manufacture has been doing nothing else for generations.
Piaget began making ultra-thin movements in 1957 with the 9P caliber, a manual-wind movement that was 2mm thick and changed what watchmakers thought was possible. The automatic version of that pursuit took decades longer because a rotor adds height, and on a movement this thin, every tenth of a millimeter is a design problem. The 1200P, introduced in 2010, solved it by integrating the rotor into the movement architecture rather than stacking it on top, arriving at 2.35mm for an automatic movement.
The G0A39112 puts that caliber in a 38mm rose gold case and keeps the dial spare enough that the thinness reads immediately from across a room. It sits in a long line of Altiplano references, but the 1200P is the one that closed the chapter on what Piaget set out to prove in the 1950s.
Twenty meters of water resistance is the number to take seriously. Piaget states it, but in practice this watch is not for rain, hand-washing, or any situation where water is plausible. The case and crystal at 5.25mm total means there is very little margin for error in the gasket geometry.
Rose gold scratches and develops a patina faster than steel or platinum, so buyers who want a pristine look need to budget for polishing or accept the wear. The 1200P is a fragile caliber by design: thinness and robustness pull in opposite directions, and Piaget chose thinness. Drops and shocks are a genuine concern.
Pre-owned examples should be examined carefully for case damage and crystal chips, which are expensive to address at authorized service.