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The Aikon Automatic 42mm is Maurice Lacroix's answer to the integrated-bracelet sport watch category, built around an in-house movement and a skeletonized dial that lets you see what you paid for. It launched in 2016 at a price that undercut many Swiss competitors offering comparable finishing and genuine manufacture credentials. This is the version that earns the brand serious consideration.
Maurice Lacroix had long sourced movements for its sport and entry lines before committing to full in-house production for the Aikon. The 2016 launch was deliberate: ML wanted a watch that could sit in a case next to the Royal Oak and Nautilus conversation without being laughed out of the room on movement grounds. The ML115 automatic, developed entirely in-house, gave the Aikon that credibility.
The skeletonized dial design was chosen to make the caliber visible and central to the proposition rather than hidden under a solid chapter ring. Since launch, the line has expanded with chronographs, ladies sizes, and bronze variants, but the 42mm automatic in steel remains the reference most collectors cite when they argue for ML as a genuine manufacture.
The integrated bracelet on early references (pre-2020 production) had a clasp with limited micro-adjustment, which makes fit fussy on wrists between standard link sizes. Examine the clasp mechanism closely on any pre-owned example and confirm the butterfly deployant operates smoothly without play. The skeletonized dial is appealing but collects dust and lint visibly; ask any seller for photos under magnification before buying remotely.
ML's after-sales network outside Europe and a few major US markets is thin, so factor in shipping costs if you ever need a service. Finally, the angular case edges on the lugs are ground surfaces that show scratches more obviously than brushed flats; condition grading on pre-owned Aikons often undersells how worn the lug edges look in person.
Pre-owned 42mm Aikon Automatics in steel trade in a range that represents genuine value for an in-house movement with 200m water resistance and integrated bracelet construction. Mint examples with box and papers command a modest premium but rarely approach retail. The brand does not yet carry the secondary-market heat of AP or Patek, which is exactly why buyers who care more about the watch than the status signal find it attractive.
The ML115 automatic is a full in-house caliber with a 38-hour power reserve. Maurice Lacroix recommends service intervals of approximately five years under normal wear. Independent watchmakers familiar with manufacture movements can service the ML115, though sourcing any proprietary components requires going through ML's official parts program.
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The ML115 in-house movement is the key differentiator; Sellita or ETA architecture through the caseback is a definitive movement swap.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | ML115 in-house movement | Cal. ML115 with Maurice Lacroix-specific bridge layout visible through caseback | Sellita SW200 or ETA 2824 architecture; movement swap |
| bracelet | Signed end links | Maurice Lacroix-signed end links and clasp; ML markings present and crisp | Unsigned end links or clasp; aftermarket bracelet |
| case | Caseback screws | Caseback screws all at the same rotation angle; no evidence of non-factory opening | Randomly oriented caseback screws; non-factory opening or reassembly |