Moonphase
A moonphase is a complication that shows the current phase of the moon, from a thin crescent to a full disc, through a small aperture on the dial. It is mostly decorative and traditional rather than practical, driven by a 59-tooth wheel. Even a precise version drifts only a day every few years.
At a glance
- Complication type
- Decorative, traditional
- Driving wheel
- 59-tooth wheel
- Accuracy
- Drifts a day every few years
The appeal of a moonphase lies in tradition more than in function. Through a small aperture on the dial, you watch the current shape of the moon in the sky, its journey from a thin crescent to a full disc. It tells you nothing practical, yet it is one of the oldest and most poetic details in watchmaking.
How the mechanism works
A classic moonphase is driven by a 59-tooth wheel beneath the dial. Once a day the wheel advances by one tooth, nudging a disc that carries two painted moons, so the roughly 29.5-day lunar cycle is approximated on the dial.
- Driving wheel: a 59-tooth wheel that steps forward once each day
- Accuracy: even a well-made, precise version drifts only about a day every few years
That small error needs an occasional manual correction, much as you would reset a date complication after a short month.
Why people choose one
Unlike a measuring chronograph, a moonphase is a purely decorative complication. You can try one without spending much: the Orient Sun and Moon makes this traditional feature affordable. For more options, see our guide to the best Japanese watches.
Examples
The Orient Sun and Moon presents this classic moonphase complication affordably, making it accessible for someone trying the feature for the first time.
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Comparison
A moonphase and a chronograph serve different ends.
| Option A | Option B | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Moonphase | Chronograph | A moonphase is decorative and traditional and measures nothing, while a chronograph is a functional complication that times elapsed seconds. |
Related terms
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Frequently asked questions
Is a moonphase accurate?
No, a standard moonphase is not a precise astronomical instrument. It is mostly decorative and traditional. Even a carefully made, precise version drifts over time, falling about a day behind every few years, so it needs an occasional manual correction.
How does a moonphase complication work?
A classic moonphase is driven by a 59-tooth wheel under the dial. That wheel advances a disc printed with the moon twice, approximating the roughly 29.5-day lunar cycle and revealing the current phase through the aperture as the days pass.
Is a moonphase useful for daily wear?
No, a moonphase gives no practical daily information, it is a mostly decorative and traditional detail. Models such as the Orient Sun and Moon present this classic complication affordably, which makes a moonphase accessible to someone trying one for the first time.