H. Moser & Cie. Streamliner Tourbillon Concept Ceramic
Moser finally made a ceramic watch. Yes, the same brand that once used cheese for a case skipped ceramic until now. Strange move. Fixed in 2026.
The new Streamliner Tourbillon Concept Ceramic brings a grey ceramic case and bracelet, a loud red dial, and a flying tourbillon. Clean layout. No logo. No markers. Pure Moser attitude.
It looks simple. Well, it is not simple.
First Ceramic From Moser
Moser loves unusual materials. Still, ceramic never showed up in the catalogue before. This release changes it.
You get an anthracite grey ceramic case and a matching integrated bracelet. The finishing stays sharp:
-
vertical brushing on the bracelet
-
polished edges on case and links
-
fully polished ceramic caseback
Ceramic feels right for the Streamliner design. Smooth surfaces. Strong lines. Sporty shape. It fits the watch.
Size stays wearable.
-
40mm diameter
-
12.8mm thick with crystal
Good proportions. No giant wrist presence. No drama.
Source: Monochrome-watches.com
The Red Dial Steals The Show
The dial hits first. Deep red fumé grand feu enamel. Strong colour fade. Dark at the edges. Brighter in the centre.
No logo. No indices. No text.
You read time from the hands and nothing else.
The surface uses a hammered white gold base under the enamel. It adds texture and depth. Light shifts across the dial. It keeps your attention.
Legibility sits second. Visual impact comes first.
The hands use Globolight inserts - three-dimensional lume. Easy to spot. Classic Moser move.
At six o’clock, the flying tourbillon cuts into the dial. It rotates once per minute. No bridge above it. Clean view.
The watch stays minimal but not quiet.
The Movement Inside
Inside runs the HMC 805 automatic movement. Built in house through Moser’s Precision Engineering division.
Key details:
-
three day power reserve
-
double hairspring setup
-
flying tourbillon regulator
-
skeletonized bridges
-
dark anthracite finishing
The double hairspring improves stability and reduces positional error. This is serious watchmaking, even if the dial looks simple.
Flip the watch over. You see the movement through the caseback. Clean layout. Modern finish. No wasted space.
Why The Streamliner Platform Works
The Streamliner line started with mixed reactions. Some called it another integrated bracelet trend piece. That take aged poorly.
The design built its own identity. Rounded links. Fluid case shape. Strong comfort on wrist. It now feels like a core Moser product.
This ceramic version shows the model reached maturity. The brand now experiments with materials and complications without losing the design.
Grey ceramic and red enamel form a strong combo. Sporty but refined. Bold but clean.
Source: Monochrome-watches.com
Who This Watch Targets
This piece speaks to a specific buyer.
You want:
-
minimal design
-
strong color presence
-
high end mechanics
-
rare material mix
You do not want branding everywhere. You do not need traditional markers. You enjoy restraint with attitude.
Few ceramic watches offer a flying tourbillon in this style. That gives this model a clear position in the market.
Price And Position
Price sits around €103,000.
Not entry level. Still competitive for a ceramic watch with a flying tourbillon and in house movement.
Production stays open, not limited. Availability starts now.
Final Take
Moser made a smart move.
Ceramic suits the Streamliner design. The red enamel dial brings energy. The tourbillon adds mechanical depth. The clean layout keeps the brand identity strong.
It looks simple from far away. Up close, it shows serious detail.
If you like minimal watches with attitude, this one deserves attention.
Related Articles
Richard Mille re-releases their signature model in titanium - is it a good choice?
