In the rarefied world of haute horlogerie, innovation often moves at a measured pace, but Greubel Forsey has once again broken convention. The independent Swiss manufacture has unveiled the Nano Foudroyante, a limited-edition masterpiece that represents the brand’s 10th Fundamental Invention. Produced in just 22 pieces, this timepiece marks a turning point — the moment when a bold experimental concept matured into a fully realized creation.
Originally revealed in 2024 as part of Greubel Forsey’s Experimental Watch Technology (EWT) program, the Nano Foudroyante was seen as one of the maison’s most radical ideas. Today, it steps confidently into its own identity, no longer bound to prototype status but instead presented as a standalone milestone in modern watchmaking.


Crafted entirely in white gold, the watch departs from the tantalum-accented anniversary edition and asserts a new architectural character. A rhodium-finished gold dial with a blue minute track, blued steel hands, and a crisp white foudroyante dial create a strikingly legible composition. The tourbillon aperture adds depth and movement, while a textured blue rubber strap anchors the design with a contemporary touch.
At its core lies a breakthrough in nanomechanics. Traditional foudroyante mechanisms consume around 30 microjoules per jump; the Nano Foudroyante requires just 16 nanojoules — an energy reduction of 1,800 times. The result is a foudroyante hand that divides each second into six precise jumps, rotating once per second in harmony with the 3Hz balance wheel. This efficiency was achieved not with additional gearing, but with an ultra-minimal series of low-inertia wheels that reshape how energy can be distributed within a mechanical movement.


Visually, the innovation is no less striking. The foudroyante dial is permanently oriented at twelve o’clock, remaining fixed even as the flying tourbillon rotates — a first in horology and one that ensures absolute clarity of reading. The complication becomes both a spectacle and a study in restraint, showcasing how nanotechnology can serve artistry as well as mechanics.
Inside, the complexity is staggering: 428 individual components, of which 142 belong solely to the tourbillon cage. Yet despite its intricacy, the movement measures just 31.60mm across, housed in Greubel Forsey’s most compact case to date — a 37.90mm white gold case capped with a high-domed sapphire crystal. Every surface is meticulously finished, from straight-grained bridges to polished bevels, with engraved relief text adding subtle refinement.


The chronograph architecture adds further functionality, with a hand-wound flyback system protected by two patents. Displays include hours, minutes, small seconds, a 60-minute counter, and the captivating 60-second tourbillon rotation. The power reserve extends for a full day even with the chronograph running — a testament to the movement’s extraordinary efficiency.