Welcome to Further Details, a recurring column where we investigate what purpose an oft-overlooked product element actually serves. This week: a chronograph watch’s 45-minute counter.
Once you learn to use a chronograph watch, its busy mix of dials, subdials, scales, hands and buttons provides genuine utility and makes perfect sense.
But not always: a certain breed of these stopwatch-equipped wristwatches have a feature that’s downright puzzling. Look closely at their subdials, and you’ll find that some chronographs offer the ability to time up to a very specific number: 45 minutes. Why?
Chronographs with 30- and 60-minute timers are intuitive and plentiful, so one would assume that the use of a 45-minute counter serves a particular function. Far from a rarity or anomaly, these 45-minute chronographs were, further, relatively common for many decades — and watchmakers don’t develop and mass-produce features without good reason. Despite proliferation, however, their purpose remains the subject of speculation.

You could time a soccer half…
Most hypotheses focus on practical applications rather than technical benefits. A prevalent theory is that it was meant for timing soccer halves, and the once-chairman of Audemars Piguet is said to have preferred the feature for this reason. (Though in this case, he simply demarcated a 30-minute counter with a 45-minute mark.) That would be a reasonable use of the 45-minute counter, but developing special gearing for that purpose seems inefficient when chronographs accomplish the same thing simply by adding special dial markings to common 60-minute counters (or 30-minute counters, like in the AP example above).
There are also many examples of watches with 45-minute counters that don’t seem to have anything to do with soccer going back many decades from a range of brands — Breitling’s landmark No. 100 Chronographe-Compteur or the Universal Geneve Compur among them. Another possibility is that watchmakers simply wanted to offer more than 30 minutes while retaining decent legibility: 60-minute counters with all those hashmarks crammed into a subdial can be hard to read. In the end, it’s likely a combination of factors.