Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II

Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II: A Limited Edition With Real Historical Weight

Released May 28 to mark America’s 250th anniversary, the Zenith Chronomaster Revival A384 Liberty II ties the iconic 1969 tonneau chronograph to a genuine historical connection between Zenith’s founder and American industrial manufacturing — limited to 250 pieces in steel and 25 in forged carbon.

The Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II is not a difficult watch to justify — for an anniversary limited edition, that is saying something. Most commemorative dials lean on the milestone and let the number carry the narrative. This one has a better story, and it predates the watch by 160 years.

The thread runs to Georges Favre-Jacot, who founded Zenith in Le Locle in 1865. His travels to the United States in the 19th century put him in contact with the integrated factory model — all components produced under one roof, every stage of production controlled by the manufacturer. Nothing equivalent existed in Swiss watchmaking. He returned to Switzerland with a different idea of what a manufacture could be.

What he built became the first fully integrated watch manufacture in Switzerland. The connection to American industrial thinking is not incidental — it is the origin story. That is what the Liberty II is invoking, and why the name holds up under scrutiny.

Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II

Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II: The A384 and the El Primero 400

The case is the A384 — one of three original tonneau designs Zenith launched alongside the El Primero in 1969, when the movement set the benchmark as the first automatic integrated high-frequency chronograph. The A384 became the form Zenith returns to most reliably; the Liberty II reproduces its 37mm proportions in stainless steel or forged carbon, at 12.6mm thin and rated to 50 metres water resistance.

The dial runs a panda layout — white lacquered ground, blue snailed sub-dials at 3, 6, and 9 — with the anniversary details built into the design rather than applied on top of it. The chronograph hand carries 13 red-and-white stripes. A red “250” sits on the tachymeter scale; the date disc marks the “4” in red. None of these elements announce themselves. They are there for the collector who knows what to look for.

Inside, the El Primero 400 — a direct descendant of the 1969 calibre — runs at 36,000 vph for tenth-of-a-second chronograph precision, with 50 hours of power reserve through a column wheel and horizontal clutch.

Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II: Editions and Availability

The stainless steel edition runs to 250 pieces at $10,600; the forged carbon version is limited to 25 at $13,400. Both are North America exclusives, continuing the regional logic of the original Liberty release from 2020. The caseback is engraved “America 250th Anniversary.”

Zenith Chronomaster Revival Liberty II

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