Seiko 9S85
© Seiko
The 9S8x (and similar 8L5x) family of Hi-Beat watch movements is the flagship mechanical watch product of Seiko.
The 9S family is intended to compete with limited-production Swiss movements from companies like Rolex. The 9S family are carefully finished with Tokyo Stripes and rhodium plating and are adjusted to six positions and are only used in Grand Seiko watches.
The 9S8x family includes many notable Seiko movements
The Calibre 9S families are assembled at Seiko's Shizukuishi Watch Studio in Morioka, Iwate prefecture, Japan, along with other high-end Seiko movements.
Seiko embarked on creating a new generation of Hi-Beat movements once the new mechanical Grand Seiko was established. The first fruit of this project was a special and extremely rare 43,200 “Super Hi-Beat” watch, the Credor GBBX998. Priced at over US$600k, only a single example was ever produced in 2008. The Hi-Beat Grand Seiko with the 9S85 movement went into full production the following year. In 2014, Seiko introduced a Hi-Beat GMT Grand Seiko using the related 9S86 movement.
Year | Movement | Winding | Beat | Hands | Date | Subdial | Jewels | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 8L88 | Automatic | 43,200 | Hour, minute, seconds | None | Power reserve indicator | 41 | Credor GBBX998, “Super Hi-Beat”, -10 to +15 secs/day |
2009 | 9S85 8L55 | Automatic | 36,000 | Hour, minute, seconds | Date | None | 37 | 55 hours power reserve, +5 ~ -3 seconds/ day or +4~-2 seconds/ day |
2014 | 9S86 | Automatic | 36,000 | Hour, minute, second, GMT | Date | None | 37 | +5 ~ -3 seconds/ day |
The Seiko 9S family includes three ranges of watch movements: