Cover Tennis champion Rafael Nadal wears the RM 35‑03 Automatic Rafael Nadal in blue and white Quartz TPT

Famed for its ingenious butterfly rotor, Richard Mille’s RM 35-03 makes its comeback in three new models, including two in Carbon TPT

Many high-end watches from the past were often clunky and to be handled with great care, up till Richard Mille made his unforgettable debut in 2001 by slamming his first timepiece, the RM 001 tourbillon watch, to the ground. After it absorbed that devastating impact, monsieur Mille showed the bewildered onlookers at the now‑defunct watch and jewellery trade show Baselworld that the six-figure watch continued to keep time.

By leveraging high-tech proprietary case materials and a circuitous system of cables and shock absorbers, the intrepid Frenchman introduced watches that shunted fragility in favour of ultra-toughness—slim and lithe accessories that could be worn for any activity.

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Above Tennis champion Rafael Nadal wears the RM 35‑03 Automatic Rafael Nadal in white Quartz TPT and Carbon TPT, with a Carbon TPT caseband

Mille emphasised that his watches could withstand immense G-force, by strapping them to the wrists of top athletes, and this was how the Richard Mille timepieces grew to become a common sight at Formula 1 and the Olympics.

Befitting a King

In the 2000s, Mille tirelessly pursued Rafael Nadal, trying to convince the tennis champion to wear a Richard Mille watch on the court, and he developed numerous prototypes to appease the latter’s lofty expectations for comfort and durability. Today, Nadal is one of the brand’s most devout ambassadors, who has worn his Richard Mille watches to almost every single one of his French Open victories.

Among these watches, the RM 27 set the record at the time as the lightest mechanical watch ever made, at 20 grams. It’s also the watch that Nadal wore at his memorable win at Roland Garros in 2010. The RM 27 was developed specially to accompany him in play and shared in the universal praise Nadal received when he avenged his embarrassing 2009 performance by winning his fifth French Open and seventh Grand Slam.

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Above The Carbon TPT case comprises many parallel filament layers impregnated with resin and then superimposed between layers, before being heated in an autoclave

The “King of Clay” has remarked that he hardly notices his light and comfortable Richard Mille watches when he wears them. It bears repeating that Richard Mille is also responsible for creating the world’s thinnest watch in 2022, the 1.75 mm-thin UP-01, and no other brand has been able to make a thinner watch ever since.

Butterfly Effect

It is almost unfair that the RM 35, which is the second Richard Mille range dedicated to Nadal after the RM 27, has been coined the “baby Nadal”. While it does not have a tourbillon, the RM 35 is by no means a lesser feat of engineering than the RM 27.

The crown jewel among its intricate architecture of shock absorbers and skeletonised bridges is its patented butterfly rotor, but to understand the importance of the butterfly rotor, we first have to discuss “overwinding”.

If a self-winding watch experiences a lot of wrist movement, it can be overwound and this can damage the watch’s mainspring. The butterfly rotor developed by Richard Mille engineers can be transformed at the push of the button at the 7 o’clock position—opening into a two-bladed rotor in sport mode and snapping shut to form a semicircle rotor in normal mode.

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Above Admire the movement through its sapphire crystal caseback

When merged as one semicircle, the rotor is unbalanced and results in more winding. When fanned out, the two titanium wings are balanced at 180 degrees from each other and are more resistant to winding, so that even if its wearer is moving vigorously, the RM 35-03 is unlikely to be overwound.

Modern Marvel

While the RM 35-03, just like most Richard Mille watches, has a motor racing-inspired indicator that tells if its crown is in neutral, winding or time-setting position, this watch has another indicator at 6 o’clock to show if rotor winding is on or off.

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Above Tennis champion Rafael Nadal wears the RM 35‑03 Automatic Rafael Nadal in blue and white Quartz TPT

In December last year, this groundbreaking sports watch made its triumphant return, now available for the first time in a Carbon TPT case. The RM 35-03 Automatic Rafael Nadal is available in three versions: blue and white Quartz TPT; Carbon TPT and white Quartz TPT; and Carbon TPT.

It mesmerises with its compelling visual depth, created by inward-slanting numbers and layers with different finishes. Its skeletonised movement is accentuated by bridges and a baseplate made from grade 5 titanium with a grey electroplasma and PVD treatment, and microblasted grade 5 titanium hands.

To add to the pleasure of wearing the RM 35-03, one can actually feel the springing motion when the butterfly rotor’s button is pushed.

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Richard Mille

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