This IWC 3251-10 is in super nice condition and is a complete set including original factory boxes and papers. This watch is essentially a MARK XVI with the addition of the UTC complication.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlRz74WyERQ This is a close up of the model I am selling.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBaTCr4J4Hw This video is excellent. This model has the UTC at the 6 instead of mine which is at the 12. 

Complete service at IWC factory in 10-15.

Warranty certificate covers watch until 10-17

39mm case

Original full link stainless steel bracelet (an $1800 upgrade over leather strap)Many have said that this bracelet is one of the most comfortable and aesthetically beautiful of all the high end watches including Rolex. The look and feel is quite wonderful. Easy to adjust to size.

Complications:

Date and universal time.

Please feel free to contact me. I am not a dealer. I am a doctor. 

This watch is from my personal prized collection. I am selling it to raise money for a family affair coming up in September.

You can reach me at 314 306 2579 (call or text)

I am open to offers, but please make them close to the asking price as I have that much and more in it.

Thanks for looking.

You will not be disappointed. I am a 100% eBay member since 2003 and take honesty seriously.

What follows is a little description of how cool the UTC complication really is:

UTC – The World's Time Standard

Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the basis for civil time today. This 24-hour time standard is kept using highly precise atomic clocks combined with the Earth's rotation.

Illustration image

The Greenwich Meridian in London, England.

©iStockphoto.com/stocknshares

A Standard, Not a Time Zone

UTC is the time standard commonly used across the world. The world's timing centers have agreed to keep their time scales closely synchronized - or coordinated - therefore the name Coordinated Universal Time.

Atomic and Solar Time

Two components are used to determine UTC:

UT Started in 1884

Universal Time (UT) was created at the Washington Meridian Conference in 1884. This is the basis for the 24-hour time zone system we know today.

At the time, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) was chosen as the world’s time standard. The reference line or starting point, the Prime Meridian, was determined to be the transit circle at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London. The transit circle is a part of the telescope's mechanics and it is still cited as the Prime Meridian's original reference.

From GMT to UTC

In 1960, the International Radio Consultative Committee formalized the concept of UTC, and it was put into practice the year after. The name Coordinated Universal Time was officially adopted in 1967.

Why UTC – not CUT or TUC?

UTC was adjusted several times until 1972, when leap seconds were introduced to keep UTC in line with the Earth's rotation, which is not entirely even, and less exact than atomic clocks.