Big Bang MECA-10
Hublot’s long-power-reserve sports watch turns movement architecture into the dial itself.
Prices are a snapshot from when this page was built — confirm on the retailer's site.
Story & heritage
Wikipedia singles out Meca-10 as one of the innovations that summarize Hublot’s modern watchmaking identity. In the Big Bang range, that name signals a movement-led branch where the power-reserve architecture is as important visually as the case itself.
Hublot’s current catalog spreads the concept across 42 mm and 45 mm references in titanium, King Gold and carbon-forward executions, showing that the movement has become one of the brand’s stable signatures rather than a short-lived experiment.
Materials & craft
The key fact is in the name and product titles: a 10-day power reserve. Hublot positions the Meca-10 as an exposed, structural movement, then wraps it in familiar Big Bang materials such as titanium, King Gold and frosted carbon on rubber straps.
Because the line puts the movement architecture front and center, even the simplest titanium reference feels more mechanical and open than a conventional closed-dial sports watch.
How to choose & style
Collectors who like visible mechanics but want a daily-wear Hublot usually end up here. Titanium is the easiest buy; carbon and black magic make the technical character much stronger, while King Gold turns the same mechanism into something more opulent.