Side by side

Christopher Ward C1 Moonphase 40vsChristopher Ward The C12 Loco

The numbers, the dial colors, the calibers — laid out so you can stop flipping between tabs.

C1 Moonphase 40
Christopher WardC1 Moonphase 40
MSRP $2,850
The C12 Loco
Christopher WardThe C12 Loco
MSRP $5,460

At a glance

11 of 29 specs differ
Diameter
C1 Moonphase 4040mm
The C12 Loco47.5mm
Power Reserve
C1 Moonphase 4038h
The C12 Loco144h
Water Resistance
C1 Moonphase 4030m
The C12 Loco30m
MSRP
C1 Moonphase 40$2,850
The C12 Loco$5,460

Full specifications

Case

5 specs
Diameter
40mm
47.5mm
Thickness
13.3mm
13.7mm
Lug-to-Lug
47.9mm
47.5mm
Lug Width
20mm
25mm
Finish
Brushed and polished
Brushed + Polished + Sandblasted

Crystal & Dial

1 specs
Lume
SLN X1 WL C1
Super-LumiNova

Movement

4 specs
Caliber
SW220-1
CW-003
Power Reserve
38h
144h
Jewels
26
29
Complications
Moonphase
Moonphase, Day-date, Date

Pricing

1 specs
MSRP
$2,850
$5,460

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What people say

Owners + reviewers, side by side

Synthesized for each watch independently from owner discussions, enthusiast forums, written reviews, and video reviewers.

Christopher Ward C1 Moonphase 40

Owners widely praise the Christopher Ward C1 Moonphase 40 for its stunning aventurine dial and prominent, lumed moon, with one owner calling it a 10/10 for moon display. However, the lack of dial indices and lumed hands makes time-telling difficult, and the seconds hand is considered largely meaningless for precise tracking. Accuracy averages +2.3 seconds per day with a 38-hour power reserve. On balance, owners view the Christopher Ward C1 Moonphase 40 as a showpiece dress watch for occasional wear, rather than a tool for precise timekeeping, due to its striking dial and moon complication.

Christopher Ward The C12 Loco

Owners widely praise the Christopher Ward The C12 Loco for its unusual technical ambition, well-finished movement aesthetics, and value, particularly noting the dial-side floating free-sprung balance. Some owners find the mid-case design creates odd proportions, and the 30m water resistance is flagged as a limitation. The watch features a manually wound twin-barrel movement in a 41mm steel case with a 47.5mm lug-to-lug and 13.7mm thickness. Overall, owners rate the Christopher Ward The C12 Loco highly for its ambitious movement design and value at its price point.

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