
The Patrimony Perpetual Calendar at 4.5mm is one of the thinnest perpetual watches in production; secondary prices reflect extreme thinness and Vacheron's consistently high finishing standard.
The 47100/000P-9507 is Vacheron Constantin's platinum take on the Patrimony Perpetual Calendar, a watch that earns its price through serious mechanical credentials and deliberate restraint. Caliber 1120 QL is a paper-thin automatic perpetual calendar movement with a heritage reaching back to the JLC 920 base; combined with the Patrimony's clean, uncluttered dial layout, this is one of the few perpetual calendars where the complication reads as natural rather than forced. Platinum makes an already scarce reference genuinely rare, and collectors who know the market treat it accordingly.
Vacheron introduced the modern Patrimony Perpetual Calendar line in the mid-2000s, gradually expanding metal and dial options over the following decade. The 47110 family (manual-wind) predates the 47100 automatic by several years; the automatic perpetual using caliber 1120 QL arrived as the natural next step for buyers who wanted the complication without hand-winding. The 1120 QL traces its movement architecture to the ultra-thin AP/PP/VC collaboration of the early 1970s, making it one of the most proven ebauche platforms in fine watchmaking.
The 9507 dial configuration, in this case a white Grand Feu enamel or white lacquer treatment depending on production run, has been the signature look since the reference launched. Platinum references in this family have always been produced in smaller numbers than the rose or yellow gold variants, typically allocated to boutiques rather than broad distribution.
Verify the perpetual calendar mechanism has not been incorrectly advanced. Forcing a perpetual calendar through a date change at the wrong time of day is one of the most common and costly errors a previous owner can make, and the repair bill on caliber 1120 QL can be substantial. Inspect the platinum case carefully under magnification; platinum is softer than many buyers expect and polishing marks on the lugs and case flanks are common on pre-owned examples.
Confirm all subdials are synchronized: month, date, day, and leap year cycle must all align correctly before purchase. This reference omits a leap year indicator on the dial, so the only way to confirm the mechanism is on the correct year within the four-year cycle is to cross-reference with a known date and cycle calculation. Ask for service records and, if none exist, factor a full service into your offer.
Platinum perpetual calendar Patrimonys trade at a meaningful premium over the rose gold equivalent, generally 15 to 25 percent depending on condition and dial state. White lacquer dials in excellent condition hold value better than examples with any dial aging or scratching, since refinishing is not an option that preserves originality. The broader perpetual calendar market has softened since the 2021 to 2022 peak, so buyers currently have more leverage than they did three years ago.
That said, thin platinum perpetual calendars from Geneva independents with serious movement pedigree have a floor; expect to pay north of retail replacement cost for a clean example with papers.
Community + OSINT signals haven’t landed for this reference yet. We don’t publish a rating against zero signal — the number would mean nothing. Editorial body + caliber + market value still surface above; ratings appear once the signal corpus does.
Micro-rotor peripheral architecture and all four perpetual calendar indications must be verified; authentication profile is identical to r-vc-patrimony-perpetual.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Cal. 1120 QL micro-rotor architecture | Peripheral micro-rotor visible at movement level; movement appears exceptionally thin | Full-size center-mounted rotor; not the 1120 QL architecture |
| dial | Perpetual calendar four-aperture display | Day, date, month, and leap year all reading correctly; no indication lagging | Any lagging or incorrect indication requires immediate service |
| movement | VC movement finishing and Cal. 1120 QL identity | Cotes de Geneve on bridges; all edges beveled; Cal. 1120 QL identity confirmed through service records or caseback inspection | Any unfinished surfaces; any caliber other than 1120 QL |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
Caliber 1120 QL requires a specialist familiar with ultra-thin automatic perpetual calendar movements; this is not a movement any general watchmaker should attempt. Vacheron boutique service for a full overhaul of this caliber runs roughly $2,500 to $4,000 depending on region, condition, and whether any calendar components need replacement. Independent service through a Vacheron-trained watchmaker is possible at lower cost, but insist on seeing credentials and confirm they have access to genuine VC parts for the perpetual calendar module.