The Spark Behind the Project: When Engineering Becomes a Lifeline
The inspiration for this 3D project didn't start with aesthetics, but with a ticking sound. I’ve always been fascinated by how, in 1970, the fate of the Apollo 13 mission shifted from cutting-edge computers to a mechanical tool on a pilot's wrist.
14-second burn
When the explosion occurred and the ship went dark, the Omega Speedmaster wasn't just a watch; it became the primary navigation instrument. Knowing that a mere 14-second burn—timed manually on this specific chronograph—was what prevented the crew from drifting eternally into space, gave me the spark to start this tribute.
I wanted to use 3D visualization to honor this masterpiece of engineering. My goal was to capture the contrast between the cold, silent vacuum of space and the relentless, mechanical heartbeat of the Speedmaster. This project is my homage to an era where human courage and analog precision worked as one to achieve the impossible.
What would you trust when all the lights go out? In 1970, NASA trusted 14 seconds of mechanical precision.










