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The Heritage 1948 Chronograph is Tissot's faithful re-edition of their landmark 1948 Swiss chronograph, one of the first automatic chronographs to reach commercial production. At 39.5mm in steel with a black dial, Arabic numerals, and a three-register layout, it wears almost exactly as the original did. This is a rare case where the historical model behind the re-edition is genuine and well-documented, not marketing mythology.
Tissot introduced the T66.1.722.33 in 2011 as part of the Heritage line, drawing directly from archive pieces. The movement is the ETA 2894-2, a solid Swiss automatic column-wheel chronograph with date, running at 28,800 vph. The dial layout preserves the three subsidiary registers of the original: running seconds at nine, thirty-minute counter at three, and twelve-hour counter at six.
Production has continued since 2011 with only minor variant changes, primarily in strap options. Tissot also produced a white dial version and limited references, but the black dial T66 is the closest to the 1948 original in feel.
The chronograph pushers on ETA 2894-2 examples can develop sticky return if the watch sat unworn for years without service. Check that both pushers engage crisply and that the reset snaps cleanly back to zero without hanging. The dial printing on earlier examples can show fading around the subdial tracks under magnification, so inspect under good light before buying used.
Lug and case edge wear shows quickly on this model because the finishing is relatively flat, so look at the lug tips carefully on pre-owned pieces. Verify the crystal is original and unscratched; replacement costs are modest but a cracked or chipped crystal is a negotiating point.
New old stock and lightly used examples regularly sell in the $600 to $900 range depending on condition and whether the box and papers are present. A complete set with box, papers, and original strap adds roughly $100 to $150 over a naked watch. There is no meaningful speculative premium on this reference; it trades on condition alone.
The black dial version commands a slight edge over the white dial in the used market because the historical connection is more legible.
The ETA 2894-2 is one of the best-supported Swiss movements in independent watchmaking, with parts widely available. Tissot and most independent watchmakers recommend a full service every five to seven years, with chronograph service running approximately $200 to $350 at an independent and somewhat more through authorized service. The movement's column-wheel architecture makes it a straightforward service job that any competent watchmaker familiar with ETA should handle without difficulty.
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Sub-dial centering is the primary counterfeit tell on the Heritage 1948; any off-center register is not genuine.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Sub-dial centering | Both chronograph sub-dials centered precisely within their registers; printing concentric with the aperture edge | Any sub-dial with visible off-center printing; genuine dials are manufactured to tight centering tolerances |
| case | Rectangular cushion case shape | Case shape matches the 1948 reference exactly with correct lug curvature and case-to-lug proportions | Case shape that deviates from the cushion geometry; incorrect lug angles or case height |
| caseback | ETA 2894-2 column-wheel movement | Column-wheel visible through the exhibition caseback; movement signed ETA 2894-2 or Tissot with appropriate finishing |
| Movement without a column wheel or unsigned movement in a watch sold as Heritage 1948 |