With the Speed of Sound, Louis Moinet returns to one of Swiss watchmaking’s most storied calibres, the Valjoux 88, transforming it into three contemporary masterpieces limited to just three pieces each. Presented in vivid shades of black, green and orange, these ultra-rare editions bridge the romance of a 1940s movement with bold, modern design language.
At the heart of each watch beats the historic Valjoux 88, meticulously modernised by the master watchmakers at Les Ateliers Louis Moinet. Its most poetic reinvention lies in the moon-phase display, where a domed lunar disc is hand-painted with luminescent detail and inset with a fragment of Dhofar 457, a rare lunar meteorite sourced from a crater. Two opposing pointers at 3 and 9 o’clock indicate the full moon when aligned with the meteorite fragment, creating a display unseen in traditional watchmaking.

The contemporary signature of the Speed of Sound extends across its dial architecture. Crafted using traditional engine-turning techniques on historic machines, the guilloché surface reveals shifting depth as light moves across it, alternately radiant and restrained. Chronograph and small seconds counters incorporate Aletai iron meteorite, adding tactile texture and a subtle cosmic narrative beneath the sapphire dome.
Housed in a 40.7 mm grade 5 titanium case, polished and satin-brushed for contrast, the watch balances lightness with presence. The box-type sapphire crystal, treated with anti-reflective coating on both sides, magnifies the intricacy of the dial. Openworked lugs flow seamlessly into a preformed rubber strap secured by a triple-blade folding clasp, underscoring the watch’s sport-inflected refinement.




Turn the piece over and the transparent caseback reveals hand engraving in a classical motif of floral curves and delicate scrolls reminiscent of lace. The decoration elevates the movement into a decorative canvas, affirming Louis Moinet’s dedication to ancestral crafts even within a resolutely modern context.
Technically, the hand-wound chronograph operates at 18,000 vibrations per hour, offering a 40-hour power reserve and 17 jewels. Beyond timekeeping, it features a scale capable of measuring the speed of sound: by starting the chronograph at the sight of lightning and stopping it upon hearing thunder, the wearer can calculate distance through acoustic delay, a poetic reminder of the watch’s namesake.

Limited to just nine pieces across three colourways, the Speed of Sound stands as both horological revival and contemporary artwork. By combining a reimagined Valjoux 88 with extraterrestrial materials and rare crafts, Louis Moinet once again demonstrates that heritage is not preserved in silence — it is transformed through creative audacity.