Heuer Monaco Vintage NOS 73633G Gray / Black 1970s Steve McQueen Calibre 11
Item History & Price
Movement - 3-register, Valjoux 7736 Manuel wind movementHands - All original brushed steel, with red and luminous inserts, triangular red tipsDial - All-original grey dial and black registers, with lovely patina around the original gasket leakage (imo)Case - 40mm minty sharp steel case (this was a safe-queen), ref 73633G, casebook showing 1133 clearly. Serial - re 1971-72 rangeCrystal - seem original, with light s...cratching Service history unknown- but seems to run well.
MONACO17-jewel Valjoux 7736 manual wind movement, slate grey dial with three black subsidiary dials for running seconds, 30 minute and 12 hour recording, dial signed Monaco Heuer, steel hands with luminous inserts and red tips, red chronograph hand, varied baton indexes for the hours, white outer 1/5th seconds scale, polished and brushed finish square case with special snap down case back, original black leather Heuer strap with steel Heuer buckle, case, dial and movement signed 40mm.Footnotes The Monaco model line included automatic and hand-wound versions. With the classy three registers, the deletion of the date, the hand-wound models offer a striking dial design. An important running second hand at 9 o'clock was added for the racing crowd. The Monaco with the reference 73633 G was first shown in the 1970/71 Heuer catalogue. Powered by the Valjoux 7736 movements, the grey dial version was reference 73633 G and reference number codes include an indication of the movement similar to the automatic Monaco. Serial and reference numbers are engraved between the lugs and Heuer Tool No.033 is marked on the case back. The 73633 manual wind case has the same dimensions as the automatic Monaco reference 1133 and the crown is back at its classic manual wind position between the fluted chronograph pushers.
The TAG Heuer Monaco Calibre 11 automatic chronograph is a cool watch. Like so cool you?re not even sure if you have what it takes to pull off wearing one. (Spoiler alert: you do, you?re awesome.) The distinctive square case. The retro good looks. The eye-catching blue dial. It all works. You could make the argument that it shouldn?t. But it does. And that?s what makes the Monaco so damn iconic. That and the endorsement of the King of Cool himself, Steve McQueen. But more on that shortly. Even at 50 years old, the Monaco still has what it takes to get our motors running. (See what I did there?). Read on to find out why.