You were not alone, Mike ...

Dec 19, 2011,16:20 PM
 

Zenith had "Zenithium", a steel, titanium and niobium alloy that, according to their marketing had the strength of steel, the shock absorption of titanium and the shape memory of niobium!

Franc Vila had "Lightnium", an aluminium-lithium based alloy that was, well, light!

I am still waiting for A. Lange & Sohne to come out with a watch case made of Germanium. smile

And Hublonium is an alloy of magnesium and aluminium, but can you remind us what properties that brought to the watch case?

And it's great that "Magic Gold" has got everyone interested and talking about case materials again. And it brings some useful properties that are more than just marketing. I am very impressed and looking forward to seeing what the final gold tint will be. Although I may be less impressed with the price. Is there any information on how expensive this 'gold' will be to produce? Can we expect entire cases made from the material, or just wear-resistant bezels?

Congratulations again on the new product.

Regards

Andrew

Ps. I give you permission to use my suggestion of "Hublite" if you need a better name. smile 

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It’s a kind of magic! Hublot and the Art of Fusion creates ‘Magic Gold’.

 
 By: 219 : December 18th, 2011-14:17
Okay – I’ll admit it – the press release did smack of Jean Claude Biver being a little over enthusiastic when he announced that here a new material based on a noble metal unchanged since the dawn of time: “A new astonishing material is born. A metal - tha...  

Thanks a lot Andrew for this excellent post.

 
 By: foversta : December 18th, 2011-14:44
We needed it as a wrap-up after all the discussions around this topic. I keep with the same position as you explained it in your post: Magic Gold has impressive features but its lightness, its stability, its resistance make it totally different from Gold.... 

Thank you for ther full report. Andrew!

 
 By: KIH : December 18th, 2011-15:48
Now we understand much more than what press release presented us. Yes, this is a revolutionaly new material. Let's say, regardless what it is called, Hublot will have interesting offerings with this new material. Kudos to the Hublot team and I am looking ... 

Alchemy?

 
 By: AndrewD : December 18th, 2011-16:07
Coming on the heels of the Unico in-house movement this is a great strategic move by Hublot and brings practical value to the wristwatch. I wonder how difficult it is to work with the material (case cutting, polishing, brushing, etc.) and how easy it is t... 

Excellent question, Andrew.

 
 By: BDLJ : December 18th, 2011-17:32
Given the hardness quoted and that only a blank has been displayed, your question concerning machining and finishing is rather pertinent. There are bundles of papers out there on MMCs, not many about a matrix with a precious metal forced through it....I'l... 

Should be called Beverium (or are they saving that?)

 
 By: cazalea : December 19th, 2011-09:16
What an interesting development - imagine the market for matching accessories - rings, jewelry, etc Despite the appeal of patina, there's also the appeal of buying a delicate ring that won't wear through as my wife's rings have ... Cazalea

haha funny

 
 By: mikemargolis : December 19th, 2011-15:59
I actually came up with the word "Hublonium." JCB was excited because he had the metal already, that was way back in maybe 2007.

You were not alone, Mike ...

 
 By: AndrewD : December 19th, 2011-16:20
Zenith had " Zenithium", a steel, titanium and niobium alloy that, according to their marketing had the strength of steel, the shock absorption of titanium and the shape memory of niobium! Franc Vila had "Lightnium", an aluminium-lithium based alloy that ... 

Hublonium

 
 By: mikemargolis : December 19th, 2011-17:28
is an alloy, as I understand it, of magnesium and aluminum, which are both quite soft metals, and a hardening agent called Titanex, which makes the alloy called AG5 (aka Hublonium). Obviously, what it brings to the watch world is super light weight and go... 

Thanks for the additional info. [nt]

 
 By: AndrewD : December 19th, 2011-18:29
No message body

Yes indeed

 
 By: jcbiver : December 22nd, 2011-22:02
Yes, we will have the entire watch case made with 18carats Magic Gold, and most probably also from time to time only the bezel

thank you for this

 
 By: playtime : December 18th, 2011-17:59
a very interesting read very impressive technology Jason

Nice report Andrew!

 
 By: andrewluff : December 19th, 2011-01:49
I didn't know anyone was there for Purist otherwise I would have said hello! A great recap of the release, but of course the only thing missing is JCB's energy which does not come across on the photos!! Cheers Andrew

Thank you for the additional info..

 
 By: ocwatching : December 19th, 2011-14:26
I find this interesting and I see Hublot in a different light. We will see the end result soon!

questions......

 
 By: JMan : December 19th, 2011-18:43
Hi Andrew, Thanks for an informative post. This is certainly an impressive achievement for Hubot and deserves kudos. A few different questions that come to mind: * Are they "casting" the Magic Gold to near net shape? Since it is so hard, it would be very ... 

Some answers

 
 By: jcbiver : December 19th, 2011-22:20
* Are they "casting" the Magic Gold to near net shape? Yes, we will have to use "casting" technology in order to make 18carat Magic Gold cases. We are currently investing in a new production line (4 Millions) in order to produce these new material cases. ... 

Hublite, Hublotite, Hublonite, Hubrite, Hubris, Hubliss...

 
 By: MMK : December 22nd, 2011-14:48
Dear Mister Biver, what a beautiful innovation! please be so kind as to allow me to ask some things that hit me while reading, why was the gold infused, instead of a powder-metallurgic approach (e.g. like the Böker Cera Titan, ZrO+TiC+Ag or the 254SMO ste... 

will check and answer

 
 By: jcbiver : December 22nd, 2011-22:00
Will check with our metallurgist and once I have his answer I will copy it to you

answer to your questions

 
 By: jcbiver : December 23rd, 2011-00:47
Here are a few answers: why was the gold infused, instead of a powder-metallurgic approach (e.g. like the Böker Cera Titan, ZrO+TiC+Ag or the 254SMO steels)? In the powder technology, it is impossible to sinter the ceramic. The strength of Magic Gold is t... 

Thank you very much!

 
 By: MMK : December 23rd, 2011-09:18
and sorry for the N/C mix up. The Boron Carbon bond is less polar than the BN, thus the matrix resembles more an metalloorganic phase than an ionic, so it probably doesn't need any surfactants for the gold.