Passer au contenu

Panier

Votre panier est vide

Abonnez-vous à notre newsletter

Ne manquez aucune nouveauté : soyez les premiers avertis de nos nouvelles pièces.

Jardur Bezelmeter with tropical dial

Acier inoxydable | Manuel | 37.5 mm

Prix de vente€6.900,00

Jardur is one of those American-market names that serious collectors have quietly rediscovered — a brand that sourced its movements and cases from the finest Swiss suppliers and sold the results through the US market at a time when American buyers demanded genuine quality. The Bezelmeter is its most ambitious proposition: a pilot's chronograph with a rotating bezel carrying degree markings for navigation calculations, a 24-hour inner track, and a dial density that rewards extended study.

The Valjoux 72 inside is, by any measure, the right movement for a watch of this ambition. A column-wheel chronograph of the highest order, produced from the 1940s through the 1960s, it powered some of the most celebrated sport chronographs of the era — its precision and reliability well-established long before the references that made it famous. Here it is signed Jardur, confirming the watch's American market identity.

The black dial has transformed into something far more interesting than its original state — a deep, mottled tropical surface of brown, charcoal, and near-black that shifts constantly under different light. The original radium lume on the Arabic numerals and hands has developed that warm, honey-toned patina that only genuine age produces, the red degree markings on the inner chapter ring still vivid against the darkened surface.

The 38mm steel case presents unpolished, its original surfaces intact. A genuinely rare and characterful pilot's chronograph, complete and honest.

Jardur Bezelmeter with tropical dial
Jardur Bezelmeter with tropical dial Prix de vente€6.900,00

SPECIFICATIONS

Reference  
Year  
1960
Diameter  
37.5 mm
Movement  
Manuel
Dial color  
Noir
Case material  
Acier inoxydable
Bracelet material  
Cuir
Accessories

CONDITION

Case  Très bon
Dial  Bien
Movement  Très bon
Hands 
Bien
Crown  Très bon
Warranty   12 mois

Jardur

Some brands never made it into the history books, yet they were there when history was being made. Jardur is one of them.
The story starts in 1937, in New York City. Samuel Klepper, a pilot himself, founds the Jardur Import Company at 874 Broadway. His goal isn't to make a beautiful watch. It's to build a precision instrument for people whose lives depend on keeping accurate time: aviators.
The watch that defines the brand is the Bezelmeter 960 — a chronograph engineered for the cockpit, with a counter-clockwise graduated rotating bezel that lets a pilot track mission duration from the moment of takeoff. Not a fashion accessory. A tool, in the most literal sense.
During World War II, Jardur becomes a quiet but real presence among military pilots. In 1942, James Howard Kendelberger, president of North American Aviation, personally presents a Bezelmeter 960 to Jimmy Doolittle. That watch is now housed at the Smithsonian Institution. It might be the most concise way to describe what Jardur meant at the time.
The brand closes in 1960, when its founder retires and chooses not to sell or pass on the company. No buyout, no rebrand, no dilution. A clean stop, almost consistent with the no-nonsense philosophy the brand had maintained from day one.
For today's collector, Jardur sits in a compelling place: limited production, a well-documented history, and a dial legibility that still holds up sixty years on. These are watches found in estate sales, in the drawers of former pilots. Not at major auction houses. Which is precisely what makes them worth looking for.

Ask a Question

Do you have a question about this watch? We'd love to help.
Fill out the form below and we'll get back to you shortly.