Greetings fellow IWC-holics,
I have read recently a 2007 online report at WatchProSite focusing on the presentation made by Guy Bove at the premiere of the third Da Vinci series.
At some point it stated that those Da Vinci's (at least the chronograph model shown on the picture) are equipped with an inner case, made most likely of titanium, which holds the circular movement.
I wonder if all members of the third edition (including most recent least-complicated automatic models) have this feature implemented? Or was it only the most sophisticated flagship model? Anyone could throw some light on the subject?
I was trying to find more sources on that subject, but it seems not widely discussed. I am familiar with soft iron inner cases in pilots and Ingenieurs, but Da Vinci? I know that the purpose of such solution here is completely different, but if that is the case, it becomes even more interesting.
Any help appreciated.
Best,
Wojtek