

AVI CO-PILOT
YOUR CO-PILOT FOR LIFE
THE CO-PILOT AVI REF. 765
In the early 1950s, Willy Breitling set out to create a chronograph tailored for military pilots—rugged, reliable, and built for precision. Pilots needed a functional timepiece to track crucial events while keeping their hands on the controls. This new chronograph was designed to complement their trusted cockpit instruments, leading to a name that said it all: the Co-Pilot AVI. That pioneering design lives on today in the Classic AVI collection.


THIS IS NOT A DATE!
Willy Breitling knew how important legibility for pilots was and came up with the groundbreaking idea of displaying the elapsed minutes with a disc instead of the usual subdial. What looked like a date window at three o’clock was a digital 15-minute totalizer. This innovative feature enhanced clarity under pressure.
The first Co-Pilot AVI (ref. 765), launched in 1953, was the descendant of the onboard and wrist-worn military instruments made by the HUIT Aviation department. The oversized numerals on its black dial ensured that reading the time didn’t distract the pilot from flying. Its engraved rotating bezel made it possible for pilots to access an immediate reading of long elapsed time and could also be used as a second time-zone indicator. It featured a beaded bezel, to make it easier to manipulate while wearing gloves. While the very first Co-Pilot was launched with the groundbreaking digital minute recorder, a more traditional analog version with a third subdial was launched right after and both were produced concomitantly from the mid-1950s until the early 1960s.


With international travel booming, Breitling introduced the Co-Pilot Unitime (ref. 1765), featuring a 24-hour dial and rotating bezel for tracking multiple time zones. Its popularity continued to grow with special yachting editions designed to time regatta countdowns—proof that the Co-Pilot was built for every adventure: “In the Air, On the Ground, Under the Sea.”
Discover the timepieces that defined us
THE AUTOMATIC CO-PILOT
The year 1969 arrived, and with it, the launch of the caliber Chrono-matic, one of the first automatic chronograph calibers, developed in partnership with Heuer-Leonidas, Hamilton-Buren, and Dubois Depraz. This revolutionary caliber combined the performance and functionality of a chronograph with the ease of an automatic watch (goodbye to daily hand winding!). An automatic version of the Co-Pilot AVI (ref. 7651) was created featuring a 48mm case. Its large size was due to it being water-resistant up to 200m. The Navitimer and SuperOcean were also fitted with the same automatic movement. The look was modern and sporty, with orange accents that defined design in the 1970s, but always with the signature thin luminescent indexes in the oversized minute recorder.

