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The Classico Automatic is Ulysse Nardin's clearest argument that you can have the brand's aesthetic DNA without paying for an in-house movement. At 40mm in steel, it sits comfortably between a dress watch and an everyday piece, and the arabesque dial engraving gives it a visual identity most watches at this price point cannot match. If you want UN on the wrist and the Freak or Marine is out of reach, this is the honest starting point.
Ulysse Nardin built its 19th-century reputation on marine chronometers precise enough for naval navigation, and that heritage is what the Classico line is trading on aesthetically. The Classico family exists to give the brand an accessible entry at dress-watch proportions, placed well below the complication-heavy Marine and Freak collections. The current 3203-136-2 specification has been in production since roughly 2015, updated to the 40mm case size that fits modern wrist preferences better than the earlier 39.5mm variants.
UN has never positioned the Classico as a manufacture showcase; the arabesque guilloche engraving on the dial is the value proposition, not the movement inside.
The UN-815 is an ETA 2892-A2 with UN finishing and regulation applied, which means you are not buying in-house watchmaking at this price. That is not a defect, but buyers expecting manufacture credentials should look at the Marine Torpilleur or save further. Pre-owned examples occasionally surface with dial damage around the engraved chapter ring where amateur cleaning has worn the applied finish.
Bracelet and strap attachment points on steel Classico cases have shown wear on heavily used examples, so inspect the lugs carefully on any used piece. The white lacquer dial variant (this reference) reads elegantly in person but photographs poorly in low light, which makes online auction photos unreliable guides to actual condition.
New old stock and pre-owned 3203-136-2 examples trade in the $2,500 to $3,800 range depending on condition and whether box and papers are present. That positions the Classico as one of the more fairly priced Swiss dress watches in its tier, given the dial craft involved. Grey market new prices from authorized dealers clearing inventory can be found closer to $3,200, which leaves limited appreciation upside but makes for a solid wearing piece at fair value.
The UN-815 caliber is an ETA 2892-A2 base, which means service parts are widely available and any competent independent watchmaker can handle a full service without UN-specific tooling. UN recommends service intervals of approximately five years, and the 2892 platform is reliable enough that lightly worn examples often run well past that without intervention. Factory service through Ulysse Nardin is available but priced at a premium relative to what independent service on this caliber should cost.
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ETA 2892-based entry UN; enamel dial variants are the most collectible and require chip inspection.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Anchor logo position and proportion | UN anchor logo centered and correctly proportioned at 12 o'clock or as specified for this variant | Off-center logo; incorrect proportions; printed rather than applied logo |
| dial | Enamel condition on enamel variants | Cloisonne enamel surface intact; no chips visible at edges or between partitions under magnification | Chips in enamel surface; cracked partition wires; non-genuine enamel |
| caseback | ETA 2892 base movement with UN finishing | ETA 2892-A2 movement visible; UN-applied finishing consistent with this tier | Wrong base movement; no UN finishing; movement swap |