Watch GlossarySub-dial
A sub-dial is an auxiliary dial that indicate time-related functions such as dual or triple time zone, day-date aperture, power reserve, and more
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What Is A Sub-Dial On A Watch?
A sub-dial is a miniature or auxiliary dial located on the watch dial, reserved for functions beyond the primary timekeeping hours and minutes that the central hands provide. Also called counters or registers, these are found in mechanical and special watches like calendars, chronographs, and GMT watches. Sub-dials are always present on chronograph watches. They improve the overall reading of elapsed time by breaking down the seconds, minutes, and hours separately.
Types Of Sub-dials
Chronograph sub-dials (Hours, minutes and/or seconds)
The keeping of chronograph hours, minutes, and running seconds, are indicated on separate sub-dials in chronograph watches as a bi-compax and tri-compax setup. Sub-dials improve the overall reading of elapsed time by breaking down the minutes, and hours separately. While the chronograph counters are most commonly 30-minute and 12-hour counters, a third sub-dia on sub-dial on a chornograph watch dial displays the running seconds of the primary timekeeping of the watch.
Date and/or day sub-dials, for calendar watches
In the absence of a date window certain date watches have an analogue date display, where there’s often a sub-dial with a hand that goes from the 1st to the 31st of the month. In perpetual calendar watches, particularly, there might be similar sub-dials for analogue displays of the day, month and even leap years.
Power reserve indicator
Usually located as a fan-shaped insert that displays the amount of stored energy left in the mainspring before the watch stops running and needs winding. The power reserve display can also be in a standard cirular sub-dial.
Moon Phase sub-dial
This counter showcases the pictorial depiction of the changing stages of the moon—new, waxing, crescent, or full moon—in real time.