Skip to content

Tutima Glashütte, since 1927.

Flieger Automatic — Tutima Glashütte

Flieger Automatic

Bold numerals from the 1941 Flieger. No chronograph. Cal. 330 automatic. Legibility, nothing else.

The 1941 Flieger without the chronograph. Same Arabic numerals. Same railroad minute track. Same legibility at a glance — the dial was designed so a pilot could read it in turbulence, and that clarity works just as well in a meeting. Cal. 330 automatic. Anti-reflective sapphire crystal. The history without the complication.

The 1941 Flieger without the chronograph. Pure legibility.

In Context

Automatic 6105-30 — perspective
Automatic 6105-03 — perspective
Flieger Bronze ZEIT Edition — lifestyle
Automatic 6115-03 — caseback

Caliber

Caliber 330 automatic movement through sapphire caseback

Caliber 330

The Workhorse

26 jewels. Rhodium-plated rotor with 18K gold seal. Powers everything from the Grand Flieger to the Seven Seas S.

26 jewels 41h power reserve 18K gold rotor seal

Stories

The Fliegerchronograph: A German Icon (1941)

The Fliegerchronograph: A German Icon (1941)

· 1941–1945

A Saxon bank sent a young lawyer to Glashütte to restructure failing workshops. Ernst Kurtz consolidated them into UROFA-UFAG, developed twelve calibers, and built one of the first German chronograph wristwatches: the Fliegerchronograph, Cal. 59, around 30,000 produced 1941–1945. His brother Walter was a test pilot.

Read the full story →
BASELWORLD 2019: High Time

BASELWORLD 2019: High Time

BASELWORLD 2019: High Time The new Tutima Flieger: a sporty pilot’s watch with an entry-level price A stylish entry into the world of Tutima: the Tutima Flieger with stai…

A Legend in a New Look

A Legend in a New Look

A Legend in a New Look Grand Flieger Airport by Tutima Glashütte with ceramic bezel and robust textile strap Into the blue: Grand Flieger Airport with ceramic bezel in Cl…

Independent voice

“People come in asking for Breitling or Omega. We introduce them to Tutima. The ones that are willing to do their homework and compare — normally coming back buying one.”

— Peter Petzold, Define Watches (Australian retailer, March 2025)