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The Wave is Ebel's most recognizable design in steel: a 36mm sport-dress watch built around a wave-patterned bracelet that flows into the case without a visible seam. It wears smaller than many modern sport watches and sits comfortably at the crossover point between office and weekend. For the money, there is very little else at this size that delivers this level of integrated bracelet craft.
Ebel introduced the Sport Classique in 1977, one of the earlier integrated-bracelet sport-dress watches to come out of La Chaux-de-Fonds. The Wave line continues that tradition, with the bracelet serving as the central design statement rather than an afterthought. The wave-link pattern is Ebel's own tooling and gives the bracelet a fluid, rippled look that reads distinctly even at a distance.
The 1216441 reference in 36mm steel has been in production since roughly 2010, making it a current-production watch with reasonable parts availability. Ebel has been owned by LVMH rivals and private equity at various points, but the Wave design itself has remained stable through the ownership changes.
The bracelet is the watch's soul and also its main maintenance liability: the wave links are intricate and stretching over time is common on well-worn examples. Inspect the bracelet carefully for loose or rattling links before buying used. The Ebel 100 caliber is an ETA 2892 base with Ebel finishing and decoration, which is good news for serviceability but means you should not pay a premium for the movement itself.
Some sellers describe the movement as proprietary Ebel manufacture, which is technically true in name only. Dial condition matters more on this reference than many others because the wave-textured dials show scratches and wear in the finishing more readily than a flat dial would. Finally, confirm that the crown and pushers are undamaged, as replacement parts for this reference can take time to source through authorized channels.
Used examples of the 1216441 in good bracelet condition typically trade between $800 and $1,400 depending on box and papers. The brand does not carry the resale floor of Rolex or Omega, which works in a buyer's favor. New-old-stock examples with full kit represent the better value in this range since the retail price has drifted upward.
Prices have been soft and stable, with no recent auction pressure to push them higher.
The Ebel 100 is a decorated ETA 2892-A2 and any watchmaker comfortable with that movement family can service it without difficulty. Standard service interval is five to seven years. Genuine Ebel-branded parts for the case and bracelet require an authorized dealer or direct contact with Ebel service, so factor that into your budget if the bracelet needs link work.
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The wave case must flow continuously into the bracelet with no gap at the attachment point; a gap means a non-genuine bracelet.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| bracelet | Wave case-to-bracelet continuity | Case-to-bracelet transition flows continuously with no gap; correct Wave attachment | Gap at bracelet attachment point; non-genuine or non-Wave bracelet |
| case | Diamond bezel verification (if applicable) | Diamond count and quality consistent with listed specification for diamond variant | Incorrect diamond count or quality inconsistent with specification; undisclosed modification |
| movement | Cal. 100 ETA 2892 base | ETA 2892 base visible through caseback; Ebel-signed rotor | Non-ETA-2892 movement architecture; non-genuine movement swap |