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The Escape Artists
Robb Report Singapore
|July 2025
Accurately described as the beating heart of a mechanical watch, the escapement is an object of obsession for both collectors and watchmakers alike. Here is primer to what it actually does and a closer look at the most novel escapements shaping contemporary horology.
BEING A WATCH enthusiast is a bit like opening a Matryoshka doll. At first, it’s all about the aesthetics: you start admiring sunburst finishes and guilloche patterns, obsessing over case profiles and lug curvatures. Before long, you're squinting at movement diagrams at 3am and nodding like it all makes perfect sense. And if you're on the cusp of burrowing down this particular rabbit hole, well, there is no escaping the vital matter of a watch escapement.
An escapement’s role in a mechanical watch is to make sure that it ticks at the right speed. Think of it as a dam with a valve. The mainspring, which contains the watch’s stored, wound-up energy, is constantly pushing, trying to unwind all at once. The escapement’s job is to hold that energy back and release it in carefully timed bursts. It’s what keeps the hands of the watch moving in steady, measured steps rather than in one chaotic spin.
In most modern mechanical watches, timekeeping is controlled by a system called the Swiss lever escapement. It relies on three main parts working together: the escape wheel, the pallet fork, and the balance wheel.
The escape wheel, which is powered by the mainspring, is always trying to turn. The pallet fork keeps it in check, locking and unlocking it in perfect rhythm. That rhythm is set by the balance wheel, which swings back and forth like a tiny pendulum. Each time the balance swings, it tells the pallet fork to briefly release the escape wheel, allowing it to move forward one notch. At the same time, a small push of energy is sent back to the balance wheel, keeping it moving. This repeating cycle—lock, release, impulse—is what creates the steady tick of a mechanical watch.
Astoundingly, the Swiss lever escapement has been the backbone of mechanical watchmaking for centuries. It evolved from an invention by English clockmaker Thomas Mudge in 1754 and was industralised for mass production in the 19th century.
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