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TweetEmail Bell & Ross came to the market in 1992 determined to offer high quality Swiss timepieces to professionals in extreme working environments (see Bell & Ross: replica watches for Professionals). Now with the instantly recognizable square design of the Instrument collection (the cases literally look like gauges lifted directly off of fighter jets or submarines),Bell & Ross may have found the individuality it needs to keep competing with better known and longestablished brands. Bell & Ross continues to push forward with a Breitlinglike passion for professional timepieces,and a combination of avantgarde style and Swiss watch making tradition. All the replica watches in the Bell & Ross Instrument collection have automatic ETA movements,antireflective sapphire crystals,luminescent hands and markers,and are waterresistant to 100 meters (about 330 feet). There are 11 different models available with the following complications: No date. Small date. Big date. Chronograph. Power reserve. Across these five basic versions,you can get all kinds of variations,including: Stainless steel,black carbon finished steel,pink gold,or titanium cases. Leather,canvas,rubber,or alligator straps. Limited edition orange or blue accents (blue version pictured here). Diamond encrusted with motherofpearl dials. The Instrument Collection has become the symbol of the company's brand image,and will likely be their calling card for many years to come. While Bell & Ross may want you to believe that their Instrument collection is for serious professionals,I believe that these replica watches will be very intriguing to the enthusiast who appreciates style and passion over brand and history. The cornerstone of this business is quality and character something that Bell & Ross seems to have come to understand very well. By James Stacey TweetEmail Bell & Ross has just caught my eye with one of the more interesting aviation replica watches I've seen in some time: the Instrument BR 0192 Compass. As you can see,the design is inspired by a traditional aviation compass. Rather than hands that move around a dial,the movement contains two disks one for hours and one for minutes that rotate beneath a stationary vertical line. The time is read through the top window while the other side of the disks are visible through the tinted bottom crystal. Very unique. Here are the facts: Automatic ETA 2892 movement. Hours and minutes (no date or seconds). Stainless steel 46mm PVDfinished case. Screwdown crown. Waterresistant to 100 meters (about 330 feet). Sapphire crystal with antireflective coating (darkened on the lower portion). Leather and rubber strap. Limited to 500 pieces. Nice looking piece,in my opinion. I don't know how long it would take to adjust to telling time using rotating disks rather than hands,but I suspect one would adapt pretty quickly. No work on pricing or availability as of yet. By Christian Cantrell