BREMONT Project Possible GMT – Limited Edition 2020 –
2019 saw one man achieve the impossible. A challenge to summit Earth’s 14 tallest mountains, all higher than 8,000m, in less than 7 months.
To celebrate this remarkable feat and the ultimate mountaineering goal, Bremont has released the Limited Edition Bremont Project Possible. Limited to only 300 pieces, the GMT diver is based on Bremont’s celebrated Supermarine 500. Built from titanium and bronze, the timepiece boasts a dark blue dial with bronze bezel and ceramic blue insert, teamed with bronze hands. Turning the watch over reveals an open case back through which the rotor can be seen which details the heights of each of the 14 mountains, and in the order that Nims summitted them.
In DIM Sunset Mode, the face behaves like DIM off during the day.
Exact switching between day and night, only in night mode with uColor.
Made with Photoshop, encoded in WatchMaker.
Have fun with this very new Face.
Functions:
- Function with Display unlock
- Tap 6 = Display unlock / lock Tap function
- Tap Center for zoom, twice for extra zoom,
- extra zoom w/o GMT hand.
- Tap 1 = set/reset time mark bezel
- Tap 3 = adjust face brightness
- Tap 4 = move GMT hand backward
- Tap 8 = move GMT hand forward
- Tap 11 = shows backside
- Tap 12 = DIM mode off / on / sunset auto on
- sec hand shows battery stat in DIM mode.
- UCOLOR for DIM mode, AOD w/o ucolor.
PROJECT POSSIBLE
2019 saw one man achieve the impossible. It is unlikely in this lifetime that anyone will complete something of the magnitude that Bremont Ambassador Nirmal ‘Nims’ Purja MBE accomplished in just 6 months and 6 days.
Nims firmly took his place in mountaineering history when he completed Bremont Project Possible, a challenge to summit Earth’s 14 tallest mountains, all higher than 8,000m, in less than 7 months. Smashing the previous record of nearly 8 years and breaking a further 6 world records in the process, it’s arguably a record unlikely to be broken. The 14 mountains all enter the ‘death zone’ at that altitude, so-called because human life cannot exist there. Unphased by the enormity of the challenge, Nims never contemplated failure.
To celebrate this remarkable feat and the ultimate mountaineering goal, Bremont is releasing the Limited Edition Bremont Project Possible. Limited to only 300 pieces, the GMT diver is based on Bremont’s celebrated Supermarine 500. Built from titanium and bronze, the timepiece boasts a dark blue dial with bronze bezel and ceramic blue insert, teamed with bronze hands. Turning the watch over reveals an open case back through which the rotor can be seen which details the heights of each of the 14 mountains, and in the order that Nims summitted them.
Even with the sapphire case back it is still water resistant to 500 meters and although built in limited numbers its strength as mountaineering watch has not been diminished.
Bremont Co-Founder Nick English comments, “We couldn’t be prouder of Nims in completing Bremont Project Possible. His focus, determination and unwavering self-belief has been utterly inspiring and having him test our watches in these extreme environments speaks to the core of what Bremont has always been about. It only felt appropriate to create a commemorative timepiece for him and for everyone who so closely followed his journey, one that he made look somewhat effortless!”
This is the first time Bremont has incorporated bronze in any of its watches. There is a very large history of bronze being used in the military world (compasses, armaments, maritime naval parts due to resistance to corrosion and saltwater etc), and with Nims’ roots in the British military as part of the Gurkhas and SBS, the use of this material certainly adds to the romanticism of the product. The slightly darker blue dial makes for a truly fantastic combination.
Nims mentions, “I believed in this project and I made sure to surround myself with people who believed in it too. I hope to have shown that anything is possible when you set your mind to it. It was humbling to have Bremont step up to become title sponsor of the project and I’m excited to be releasing this new limited edition with them. Having come from the Gurkhas and the special forces, I love all that Bremont stands for, particularly their extensive work with the military. I wore my Bremont throughout the whole expedition and it was a critical part of my equipment.”
The clock stopped on Nims’ attempt as he reached the summit of Shishpangma on 29th October 2019 at 8:58 hrs local time (00:58 GMT) beating the world record by 7 years 5 months and 8 days. Nims’ incredible achievement consisted of 14 summits in 189 days:
1. Annapurna summited 23rd April
2. Dhaulagiri summited 12th May
3. Kanchenjunga summited 15th May
4. Everest summited 22nd May
5. Lhotse summited 22nd May
6. Makalu summited 24th May
7. Nanga Parbat summited 3rd July
8. Gasherbrum I summited 15th July
9. Gasherbrum II summited 18th July
10. K2 summited 24th July
11. Broad Peak summited 26th July
12. Cho You summited 23rd September
13. Manaslu summited 27th September
14. Shishapangma summited 29th October
On 23rd April, just days into his world-record attempt and descending Annapurna, Nims led a successful rescue attempt to find fellow climber Dr Chin Wui Kin, who had been separated from an accompanying expedition and left without food, water or an oxygen bottle for 40 hours. On 15th May, having made it to the summit of Kanchenjunga in just 21 hours, Nims and his team rescued a further two climbers from a height of 8,400m and sacrificing their own supplementary oxygen to the climbers in need. Nims has a history of carrying out daring rescues during his expeditions, and in 2016 saved the life of an Indian climber in the Mount Everest death zone, taking her down 500m from an altitude of 8450m single handedly.
ABOUT NIMS
Nirmal Purja, known as Nims, is a Gurkha who proudly served in one of the British militaries most distinguished regiments in defense of the United Kingdom. Nims is the first Gurkha to climb Mount Everest while serving the British Military and he is the current holder of multiple World Records for the fastest ascent of double and triple header mountains in the ‘higher than 8000m’ category. Nims was awarded an MBE for his outstanding achievement on high altitude mountaineering.
(Bremont, Timepieces Blog, RonD.)