B.T.O. Chronograph Orange Burned
Soyuz MS-04
Case
Melted rocket engine, SRE Stainless Steel, brushed metal
Dial
Engine cladding, aluminium, original processed
Crystal
Sapphire scratch resistant
Movement
Cal. 7750
Luminous material
Super Luminova
Waterproof
10 ATM
Weight
238 g
Height
16 mm
Diameter
43 mm


Processed rocket material
-
Dial
Directly from the rocket
Engine cladding material, processed according to an original method
The watch face shown has been photographed true to its actual appearance and is one-of-a-kind.
-
Case
SRE-Stainless Steel
Produced from the rocket motor
SRE stainless steel is produced using a metallurgical process. SRE stands for “Soyuz Rocket Engine”. The first step of the process involves the reduction of carbon to 0.17% (decarburisation). The second step involves the addition of 2.8% nickel and 2% molybdenum.
Movement
Cal. 7750
The origins of perhaps the most successful Swiss automatic chronograph movement of all time date back to the year 1901, the founding date of the firm J & C. Reymond Frères S.A. Later, they continued to produce the legendary movement under a new company name, Valjoux S.A. The movement was all but made redundant during the Quartz crisi of the 1970s. Today, the ETA Valjouz 7750 is produced and distributed by ETA. Many of the world's best-known watch brands incorporate this movement into their timepieces in one form or another.
-
Type
Automatic chronograph
-
Stones
25
-
Accuracy
-2/+7s per day
-
Power reserve
48h
-
Frequency
28'800 A/H

Soyuz rockets
To the frontiers of space and back
Soyuz rockets are launched in the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and complete their journey into space in three stages. At a height of 45 km, the booster of the first stage is jettisoned. This is followed by the fairing at a height of around 85 km.
There are no fixed boundaries in space; rather, the transition between the Earth's atmosphere and space is fluid. The Fédération Aéronautique International (FAI), the International Air Sports Federation, has adopted Karaman's definition, setting the boundary at 100 km. For the US Air Force (USAF), space begins at 80 km. According to this definition, the Soyuz fairing components have crossed the boundary into space. These models can be idenitified by their white or white-red faces and the marking "Soyuz Fairing".

Soyuz MS-04
SOYUZ MS-04 was the name of a flight mission in which a Soyuz-series Russian spacecraft traveled to the International Space Station (ISS). It was the 50th visit of a Soyuz spacecraft to the ISS and the 156th flight in the Soyuz programme.
-
Mission
Manned -
On Board
Fyodor Yurchikhin, Jack David Fischer -
Rocket type
Soyuz FG -
Launch location
Kazakhstan, Baikonur Cosmodrome 45°57′54″N 63°18′18″E -
Launch date
20 April 2017 -
Launch time
07:13:44 UTC

