TAG Heuer's Monaco Speed 12 Is What Happens When The Group Project Actually Works
For years, the Monaco has carried two reputations at the same time.
To the average person, it's Steve McQueen's square racing watch. To watch people, it's the model TAG Heuer keeps using whenever the engineers are allowed to have a bit of fun. V4, Split-Seconds, Mikrograph, the recent Evergraf - the Monaco has become the laboratory where sensible product planners are not invited.
The new Monaco Speed 12 fits neatly into that tradition. The funny part is that it isn't a chronograph at all.
Instead, TAG Heuer has borrowed one of the more unusual complications inside the LVMH family and built an entire watch around it. The result is a 50-piece limited edition that looks like someone dismantled a V12 engine, only it’s inside your watch. Mindblowing.
Source: monochrome-watches.com
The movement is the whole point
The Monaco Speed 12 runs on the TH84-00, developed with La Fabrique du Temps Louis Vuitton.
If that name rings a bell, it should. Michel Navas and Enrico Barbasini have spent years building some of the most technically interesting movements coming out of the LVMH stable. Their Spin Time system has become something of a signature, originally created for Louis Vuitton before gradually finding its way into other projects.
Seeing it inside a TAG Heuer is genuinely interesting.
Luxury groups always promise "synergies," which normally translates into accountants sharing a PowerPoint presentation. This is one of the rare occasions where the corporate language actually produces something enthusiasts can enjoy.
Source: monochrome-watches.com
Twelve pistons pretending to be a watch
The display is inspired by a twelve-cylinder racing engine.
Instead of a conventional hour hand, twelve rotating cubes shaped like engine pistons jump into position as the minutes pass. Every hour one flips over, another takes its place, and the cycle starts again.
Mechanically, it's a jump-hour display.
Visually, it’s absolute cinema that exists because someone thought it would be cool. The watch industry could probably use more of that.
The central skeletonised minute hand does the rest of the work, sweeping across a black opaline track with a few restrained red details. TAG could easily have gone full casino-spec motorsport graphics here. Thankfully, somebody showed admirable restraint.
Surprisingly subtle for an €76,000 Monaco
At around €76,000, nobody is buying this because they need to know what time lunch starts.
What surprised me is how understated the watch actually is.
Yes, the movement is completely exposed.
Yes, there are twelve rotating pistons.
Yes, it costs roughly the same as a decent apartment in parts of Europe.
Yet from a distance, it still reads as a Monaco. The black and silver palette keeps everything relatively clean, and the absence of unnecessary colours stops it becoming a concept watch that accidentally escaped the trade fair.
The 40mm grade 5 titanium case helps as well. Titanium makes sense here because the movement already demands all of your attention. A heavy precious metal case would have felt like putting gold wheels on a Formula One car.
Source: monochrome-watches.com
This is TAG Heuer testing new territory
The more interesting question is what this watch says about the brand.
For years, collectors complained that TAG Heuer wasn't fully exploiting its history or technical capability. Recently, that criticism has become harder to make.
The Carrera Glassbox has been a success.
The Monaco collection keeps getting more ambitious.
The Evergraf showed the company is willing to invest in proper movement development.
Now they're pulling high-end complications from one of the strongest movement specialists in the group.
There seems to be a clear strategy forming. The bread-and-butter collections keep the business healthy while the Monaco becomes the showcase piece that reminds people the company can still surprise them.
Frankly, that's a much more interesting direction than releasing another vintage-inspired chronograph with slightly different coloured subdials.
The industry already has enough of those to wallpaper Geneva.
Source: monochrome-watches.com
Collectors will probably split into two camps
Some people will hate this watch.
Traditional Monaco buyers may wonder why a racing icon suddenly has rotating pistons instead of a chronograph. Purists generally dislike anything that interrupts a familiar formula.
Others (me) will absolutely love it.
Independent watchmaking has spent the last decade proving that collectors enjoy unusual displays and unconventional mechanics. MB&F, Urwerk and De Bethune built entire identities around the idea that watches can be entertaining as well as functional.
The Monaco Speed 12 doesn't compete with those brands directly, but it plays in a similar spirit. It values mechanical creativity over absolute practicality.
Realistically, a collector looking at this probably already owns a chronograph. Possibly several. The appeal here is owning something that starts conversations without needing a celebrity endorsement attached to it.
The price will upset plenty of people
It probably should.
A titanium TAG Heuer approaching €80,000 sounds ridiculous if you stop at the logo.
Then you look at what actually sits inside the case.
A proprietary jumping display.
A movement developed with one of the most respected high-watchmaking workshops inside the industry.
A production run of just fifty pieces.
An entirely new interpretation of the Monaco.
Nobody has to like the pricing, but it isn't random.
The bigger challenge is that the watch enters a market where buyers can also look at established independents. At this level, every purchase becomes deeply personal because logic left the room about €60,000 ago.
Final thoughts
I suspect this will be one of those watches that looks far better in ten years than it does today.
The market often needs time to catch up with odd ideas.
The original Monaco was considered strange.
The V4 looked completely mad.
Now both have a loyal following.
The Speed 12 feels like another one of those projects. It doesn't exist to chase volume sales. It exists because a major Swiss brand decided to build something unusual and had access to the right people to make it happen.
And honestly, that's refreshing.
Modern watchmaking spends an awful lot of energy trying to recreate the past.
This… this is fun.
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