Introduced: Early 2000s (around 2004)
Purpose / Inspiration: The Two O Ten was Chopard’s bold experiment in blending futuristic design with classic Swiss mechanics. Named for its case shape—2:10, a nod to both time and angle—it was a luxury sports watch with automotive cues, big curves, and a loud presence. More concept car than classic coupe, it was built for collectors who wanted something unapologetically different.
Designer: Released under Chopard’s Classic Racing design umbrella, but clearly meant to stand apart from the Mille Miglia and Superfast lines—more fashion-forward than motorsport functional
Case size: ~40mm x 41mm (TV-shaped case); wore larger due to bold design
Case options: Stainless steel, titanium, two-tone, or rose gold; some models featured PVD-coated accents and skeletonized lugs
Powered by:
- ETA-based automatic movements
- COSC-certified chronometers in many models
- Limited edition chronograph versions featured modular chronograph calibers
Bezel: Rounded-square (TV case) with polished or brushed finishes; some had tachymeter scales on the flange
Dial options: Multi-layered and industrial; often with honeycomb patterns, exposed screws, and sporty subdial layouts; racing stripes and oversized numerals were common
Water resistance: 50m
Bracelet: Rubber strap (often tire-tread styled), leather racing strap, or integrated metal bracelet; deployant clasp standard
Discontinued, limited production run—now a rare find on the secondary market
Why it matters: The Two O Ten was never meant for the masses—it was Chopard’s design playground. For a brand rooted in classic lines and high jewelry, this was proof they could push boundaries. Bold, weird, and totally original.
TV-Case Cool: A wrist shape you don’t see every day—and can’t forget
Design That Dares: Nothing borrowed, nothing safe—just pure Chopard creativity
Not Vintage, Not Mainstream: It lives in a category of its own
Made for the Bold Collector: If you wear this, you don’t follow trends—you break them