You are here
Home > Hublot > Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It?

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It?

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Do you remember when Hublot was all about “the art of fusion?” To this day, I can easily recall one of the many characteristic instances when Jean-Claude Biver started shouting at his audience with great enthusiasm about Hublot and “fuuusion,” where different materials and ideas come together to create something new. I also recall being very impressed by this novel, expensive, and consistently innovative approach that was new not just for Hublot, but any major luxury brand as well. I had to wait until now, though, to have a watch in for review that featured what I expect to prove itself as the greatest achievement of Hublot’s dedication to fusion: Magic Gold, their proprietary gold that “cannot be scratched.” So, my curiosity has at last been cured by spending some quality time with the Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold watch, and I couldn’t wait to see just how magical it really was.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Hublot And Its Love Of Fusion

This whole “the art of fusion” thing appears to have taken the backseat a bit as JCB’s attention is now delegated not exclusively to Hublot but also enjoyed by Zenith and TAG Heuer. These two, in fact, needed his guidance more than Hublot Watches World Poker Tour which has been so much more consistent than its “historical” brethren inside the luxury group LVMH.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

The “fusion” approach began for Hublot Watch 44mm 301.Pb.131.Rx with the earliest Big Bangs and their then-outrageous merging of a full gold watch with a rubber strap – this unusual coming together of materials was a heresy comparable to the Royal Oak’s 1972 coming in steel and costing what it did. Steel luxury watches have for long been completely normal when the gold-rubber combination of the Big Bang caused turmoil among luxury watch lovers… and yet, today, you can walk into any high-end watch store and find a wide range of watches from multiple brands that they will offer for sale in gold, but on a rubber strap.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

As they grew, largely thanks to JCB’s marketing genius, Hublot soon had more resources – financial and intellectual – to develop its own niche as being “the brand of fusion.” Credit where credit’s due, Hublot’s success does not only come from a marketing strategy comparable to WWII carpet bombing, but also from merging consistent and, hence, widely recognizable design (which most luxury watch buyers want as, admit it or not, people want others to see how much greenback they dropped on a watch) with bold, new, refreshing ideas and executions.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

And while by now Hublot’s fusion approach has given us the gold watch on a rubber strap, we’ve also seen the cool but remarkably confusing idea of a non-transparent-transparent watch in black sapphire (hands-on here), a Classic Fusion with a concrete bezel, and watches in blue Texalium (hands-on here) – oh, and one very funny April Fool’s article where many actually believed Hublot Watches Canada did a “fusion watch” with a tiny amount radioactive uranium.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

From one of our April’s Fools articles from quite a while ago, taking this fusion idea a bit too far. Graphics by Beau Hudspeth.

Hublot has its own proprietary recipe for its success, but elements of that recipe were clearly not tuned to prioritize the taste of the hardcore, traditionalist watch enthusiast. In other words, many other brands, by doing the same thing over and over and over again, make it much easier for “purists” to like them, while Hublot, in truth, doesn’t seem to be bothered that much and would rather do as much in 10 years as many others do in 100 (if ever).

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

However, if you look at that previous and, mind you, not even remotely complete list of Hublot’s achievements in pushing the boundaries of what a watch can be and/or is accepted to be made from, you’ll see that they try much harder than the majority of others – and the most serious achievement of all this self-imposed busyness is Magic Gold, a gold that “cannot be scratched.”

The partnership between Hublot Watches Pre Owned and Ferrari is now about five years old, and the two will be celebrating Ferrari’s 70th Anniversary together using a brand new watch made by the Italian carmaker using a brand new Hublot movement as well. For Baselworld 2017, the Hublot Techframe Ferrari Tourbillon Chronograph watch honoring this 70th anniversary will probably come in three versions: King Gold, Titanium, and PEEK Carbon, every one of which will be a limited edition run of – you guessed it 70 pieces.Hublot and Ferrari have done far more than many car and observe brand collaborations, therefore it is no surprise that rather than slapping some decoration onto an present slice, we see a completely brand new watch altogether. The architectural and bridged design of the watch is far from becoming over-the-top and overdesigned, and it is a relief. It is competitive where it needs to be without overcompensating, is lightweight and hard (at least when you consider the Titanium and carbon models), and can also be a testament to Hublot’s success of becoming a severe manufacture in both design and movements.The new HUB6311 manual-wind movement within the Hublot Techframe Ferrari Tourbillon Chronograph is made of 253 components and contains a 5-day power reserve. The chronograph is one pusher function for starting, stopping, and resetting the timer. It is an old-school thing of fascination once it comes to timepieces, but I always love and enjoy the discretion attracted by a single pusher. I am not saying that the watch is near discreet, but the pusher is one of the few splashes of colour we see here, aptly done in P485 Ferrari red. The other red pushers you see by the lugs are to get a simple strap shifting system, which is always a welcome feature.Back into the Hublot HUB6311 motion, it’s done in Ruthenium-coated Anthracite, also Hublot also boasts of the “invisible” crystal over the cage that holds the upper part of the tourbillon using a bridge. I will need to wait to see this in action carefully, but Hublot says the result is the joys of a flying tourbillon when providing the stability of a tourbillon using 2 pivot points.
Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Magic Gold – How It’s Made

It has a catchy name, that much is immediately apparent. Most things “Magic” in the life of the ordinary human (myself) include washing powder, non-chargeable batteries, and anything made in Mainland China with a retail price below $5. So, “Magic Gold” sounds just as controversial as it is for a luxury brand to use the term “Magic.” But, unlike the aforementioned items, Magic Gold truly verges on being magical when compared to regular precious metals. Here’s how it came to be.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Supposedly very, very hard to scratch – we’ll find out soon enough…

It was in 2011 that Hublot unveiled its Magic Gold, a scratch-resistant gold that is both certified as 18k by the Central Office for Precious Metals Control, and has a hardness rating of about 1,000 Vickers – 18k gold is 400 Vickers and most types of hardened steel are 600 Vickers. In the words of Mr. Biver, “You can have a [Magic Gold] watch and wear it for any sport, any use, it will just not scratch. It never ever will scratch. It will constantly look totally polished, as new (…), not scratch-able – only diamond can scratch it.” Further, Magic Gold used for the Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold will never oxidize and weighs less – but more on that latter property in a bit.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Hublot worked with the Swiss Polytechnique School of Lausanne (EPFL) to develop Magic Gold and by early 2014, Hublot had developed and installed its own, fully integrated gold foundry inside their manufacture in Nyon, Switzerland. So, although the know-how was more or less ready in late 2011, it took Hublot over two years to bring it to a stage of volume production.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Inside Hublot’s in-house foundry developed specifically to produce Magic Gold.

At Hublot’s opening event for its foundry in 2014, Andreas Mortensen, professor at EPFL, described the project as “fun” but also highlighted some interesting details. They were not allowed to use any coatings in creating a gold alloy that is visually interesting and “makes absolute technical sense.” Not a whole lot more in the project was defined, just the goal of “If you guys could make gold really hard, that would be great” – yes, that’s an actual quote.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

The professor, being a professor, also highlights the fact that while Hublot’s “marketing term of fusion” is very descriptive, the actual process of creating Magic Gold is not through fusion but alloying. Magic Gold starts its life as 24k pure gold and ceramic powder. The ceramic (boron carbide) powder is put into a silicon mold very similar in shape to that of the desired finished part. It is here that we should add that boron carbide is “the third hardest thing” ranking behind diamond and cubic boron nitride. The pre-formed boron carbide powder is then compressed at some 2,000 bars of pressure under cold isostatic pressure. The compressed ceramic is then sintered at 2,200°C while the 24k gold is melted at 1,100°C.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

An ingot of raw Magic Gold, molded in the rough shape of the final piece – the bezel in this instance.

After this operation is when the magic happens: 24k gold alloyed with 3% molten liquid gold is injected under very high pressure with inert gas at a high temperature, allowing the metal to fill the ceramic pores and create a “fusion” of the two to produce Magic Gold. Raw Magic Gold is yet to be machined and, because it is so hard, it can only be shaped by diamond-tipped tools, laser- and ultrasonic machining, or wire cutting.

So, while fusion sounds good and is arguably “sexier” than “alloying,” the latter is what better describes the process. Magic Gold is a combination of gold, made hard through alloying. Alloying is the addition of other atoms to a liquefied form which, when you cast it, forms an alloy that then solidifies and retains its identity as something that, in this case, is fully metallic with the ceramic as part of its structure. If you’re a chemistry professor/teacher and have a technical comment on this, you are invited to leave it below.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

Magic Gold – How Magical Is It Really?

So, all this technical who-do-you-think-you-are and the result, again, is an alloy that is certified to be 18k gold (like any other watch) but is 2.5 times harder than those and almost twice as hard as most hardened steels. The alloy and the manufacturing technology is protected by a bunch of patents and, Hublot says, the brand has been approached by other brands from the watch and other industries to purchase it – but Hublot says they have not and will not share the Magic Gold technology anytime soon. Last but not least, they say this alloying process can be used to merge ceramics with other precious metals and that other “magical” materials can be expected – though no word on when.

Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold Watch Review – Just How Magical Is It? Wrist Time Reviews

I’ve had the Hublot Big Bang Unico Magic Gold for 10 days or so, which really isn’t enough time to emulate the trials imposed on a watch case through years and decades. But, that hasn’t stopped me from trying. I have not refrained from wearing this Big Bang as much of the time as possible and haven’t practiced too much concern or excessive care. I reached into my backpack (seven layers of watch hell in there) looking for stuff, wore it when washing the car, and just generally, wore it through the day…

Top