The Mare Nostrum Titanio houses a hand-wound, Panerai manufactured movement, the OPXXV caliber developed on a Minerva 13-22 base. It beats at a slow 18,000 vibrations per hour just as the Angelus movement did in the vintage prototype. The hand-wound chronograph features a column wheel and swan-neck regulator, as well as bridges made of Mailechort, and Côtes de Genève finishing on the plates. None of this is visible, however, as the case uses a screwed-in back plate in an effort to remain authentic.
Panerai will build just 150 examples of the Mare Nostrum Titanio (PAM00603), so don’t sleep on contacting your nearest authorized dealer if you’re interested. We’ll update with pricing details and live pictures as we get them. Until then, learn more about the new Mare Nostrum at Panerai’s website, right here.