A Deeper Look At The Best Men’s Diving Watches

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A Deeper Look At The Best Men’s Diving Watches

Words by Mr Alex Doak

1 May 2019

NOMOS Glashütte

Ahoi Atlantik Datum (200m)

NOMOS Glashütte is a pragmatic brand with a sideways sense of humour – hence the fact that its very first water-resistant piece was pitched as a swimmer’s, not diver’s, watch. Its strap is even inspired by the woven bands that hold your municipal pool’s locker keys. NOMOS’ designers being located in Berlin (while its watchmakers beaver away deep in the Saxon mountains), the rest of the Ahoi Atlantik is sublimely designed, pumping up the brand’s signature Bauhaus aesthetic just enough to feel fit for splashing about, setting things off with a sumptuous blue dial and piercingly luminous hands that practically smell of chlorine. In a good way.

Breitling

Superocean Héritage II B20 (200m)

It may be better known for its conquest of the skies, thanks to a flurry of chronograph innovation in the first half of the 20th century, but Breitling has serious form beneath the waves, too. Its Superocean also has pedigree, dating from as far back as the late 1950s. Relaunched to industry-wide raptures in 2007, the retro-in-feel, but most certainly modern-in-build collection is now a catalogue fixture. This super-precise “chronometer” certified model will be at home with the fish, thanks to 200m water-tightness and a tough-as-old-flippers Diver Pro II rubber strap. But instead of luminous “Super-LumiNova” markings, a judicious sprinkling of red gold makes the Héritage Superocean II B20 better suited to the teak deck of your yacht, the evening’s first G&T in hand.

IWC Schaffhausen

Aquatimer Expedition Jacques-Yves Cousteau (300m)

Aquatimer is a diving-watch range that’s been going strong since 1967. All the enduring codes of sub-aqua time telling had been coined, with commercial and research divers demanding the most of their instruments. This made IWC Schaffhausen’s Aquatimer reboot of 2016 doubly impressive as the brand managed to invent a properly useful new external/internal rotating bezel, which combines the aesthetic elegance of an inner bezel, connected via a clever sliding clutch to an outer bezel that’s easy to twiddle while wearing neoprene gloves. As with all proper diving watches, the bezel only moves anticlockwise, ensuring that, even if you were to accidentally knock the bezel during a dive, your resurfacing time will simply come sooner, rather than be dangerously overshot.

Bell & Ross

Back in 1997, Parisian startup Bell & Ross scored a place in The Guinness Book Of Records with its Hydromax: proven water-resistance all the way down to an unprecedented 11,100m. Why not a rounded-down 11,000m? Simple: the deepest place on Earth is the Pacific’s Mariana Trench, which is 11,035m. Waterwings thus unanimously earned, Bell & Ross has since established itself as a fashion-forward watchmaker favoured as much by military professionals as rollnecked architects. Its square-cased instruments may be inspired by cockpit readouts from fighter jets, but the looks are just as suited to the hyperbaric suits of oil-rig welders – and just as technically advanced given the Diver’s 300m rating, as water pressure acts unpredictably around a non-circular joint.

Officine Panerai

Luminor Submersible 1950 Amagnetic (300m)

Florentine naval equipment supplier Officine Panerai was, despite its esoteric origins, a diving-watch frontrunner in the 1930s. The family firm recruited Rolex to make them a limited, and now highly collectable, run of cushion-shaped pieces for the Italian Navy’s elite, covert frogmen, adorned with Panerai’s patented luminous paint – the originally radioactive Radiomir, followed by the rather less lethal Luminor during WWII. Now in the hands of luxury powerhouse Richemont, Panerai’s iconic, voluptuous cushion shape has endured, as well as underwater performance – though with less emphasis on attaching limpet mines to Allied battleships. Even if you were to indulge in such antisocial activity, the mechanics inside this particular Submersible would be unaffected by the mine’s powerful magnet as it’s protected by a soft-iron core.

Oris

Aquis Depth Gauge (500m)

A claimed 500m diving watch with a hole deliberately drilled into the crystal dome doesn’t sound too promising at first, but it’s cleverer than you think. Pioneering a revolutionary new means of indicating your dive depth, yet still maintaining Oris’ value for money, its Swiss boffins have carved an air channel around the dial, into which sea water enters as you descend into the murky blue. As pressure increases, the air-water “meniscus” interface is pushed further around the channel, acting as a marker against the depth calibration. Simplicity itself from typically elegant Oris.

Bremont

Supermarine Waterman (500m)

Henley-on-Thames’ plucky watchmaker turns from the skies to the waves here, with a fresh new take on a collection named after the 1930s aircraft company, Supermarine, whose 1930s’ Type 300 waterplane won the Schneider Cup and was part of the lineage that led to one of Britain’s most iconic aircraft, the Spitfire. Limited to just 300 pieces, the Waterman has already been tested in the most extreme ocean environments by brand ambassador Mr Mark Healey – world-renowned free-diver, big-wave surfer and environmentalist. Extra pub-bore points are won thanks to its helium escape valve – first introduced by Rolex for its commercial Sea-Dweller model, made public in 1969 by Doxa. It’s rather useless to Mr Healey, but essential for industrial divers who spend days on “saturation” dives, eating and sleeping in pressurised diving bells. The air mix contains helium, whose atoms are tiny enough to leak into even the tightest watch case. Without a special valve, the helium can’t escape quickly enough on depressurisation, popping the dial’s crystal out.