The watchmaking arm of one of the most important Porsche tuners ever, Singer Reimagined has never really done anything conventionally, which is exactly why the Caballero caught people off guard when it dropped late last year. Here was a brand that built its entire reputation on radical chronograph architecture and it turned around and released a clean, marker-free, three-hand dress watch.
For a brand that essentially reimagined what a chronograph could be, the Caballero asked what a Singer would look like when it removes the complications. Now, with the new Caballero Titanium, it enters a new phase.

The Caballero’s Short History
The Caballero introduced the brand’s first fully in-house movement, the Calibre-4 Solotempo, and it did so in a 39mm cushion case that carried unmistakable ’70s vibes while remaining entirely specific and unique. The four synthetic rubies visible through dial apertures give the watch its signature look but are also the actual jewels capping each of the movement’s four mainspring barrels.

Grade 5 and the New Visual Language
The titanium iteration arrives in two references: Avio Blue Velvet (SR702-3) and Cocoa Brown Velvet (SR702-5). Singer has treated the Grade 5 titanium case with a micro-sandblasted surface that gives the watch a powdery, almost tactile presence, and then contrasted it with mirror-polished edges that trace its C-shaped lugs. The crown, for what it’s worth, remains stainless steel.
Each watch comes with a textile strap with leather loops and stainless steel buckles: gray for the Avio Blue Velvet and olive for the Cocoa Brown Velvet.

The dial has been slightly revised by removing the applied Singer logo that lived at 12 o’clock on the steel versions. It’s replaced by a more restrained wordmark arcing the perimeter. The dial finish absorbs light in a way that makes the four barrel rubies and the signature golden-toothed flange pop a bit more than before. Orange Super-LumiNova tips on the hour and minute hands, and a central orange seconds with a gold cabochon are where you see its automotive inspiration most prominently.

The Engine
Visible through the sapphire caseback, the Calibre-4 Solotempo carries over unchanged, bosting 145 parts and 33 jewels, and running at 28,800vph. It features four flat-mounted barrels arranged in two parallel pairs. That configuration delivers a whopping six-day power reserve with a flat torque curve across the entire 144-hour run, meaning accuracy doesn’t degrade toward the end of the reserve the way it does on a conventional single-barrel movement. Bridges are rhodium-plated with microblasted and polished chamfer finishing.

Spec Sheet
Model: Singer Reimagined Caballero Titanium
References: SR702-3 (Avio Blue) / SR702-5 (Cocoa Brown)
Case Size: 39mm
Case Thickness: 10.5mm
Case Material: Grade 5 titanium
Movement: Singer Calibre-4 Solotempo (ST5000) manual wind
Power Reserve: 144 hours (6 days)
Crystal: Domed sapphire, double-sided AR coating
Water Resistance: 50m
Strap: Textile with leather loops, stainless steel pin buckle
Collection: Permanent
Pricing & Availability
The Caballero Titanium is priced at CHF 18,500 (~$27,500) and joins the permanent collection. Both references will be available starting May 2026 through authorized Singer Reimagined retailers, including Collective Horology in the U.S.
Recap
Singer Reimagined Caballero Titanium
Singer Reimagined’s Caballero Titanium takes its already-impressive time-only watch and refines it with a Grade 5 titanium case, two new matte velvet dial colors, and a cleaner dial layout — all while keeping the same six-day in-house movement that made the original worth paying attention to.