I used to think that a divers watch with 200m to 400m water resistance was impressive until today's watch came into my collection.
Today's watch is one of the Citizen Professional Divers watches, designed for serious underwater use. The models were made for saturation divers (tool divers), and came in 3 different levels of water resistance. This model is the most serious of the lot, with a crazy 1300m water resistance - yes, really 1300m! The others in the range were only 800m and 300m. My research has found that the watches come from the early 80s (with my one being made in 1982), and it seems they were very expensive at the time, with only a very limited number being produced mainly for the Japanese domestic market (-I guess the market for people needing this level of water resistance is quite a small one). From the comments on various forums, it seems that this1300m model is even one of the holy grails of the tool divers watch collector. I was pretty lucky to get it, as it was mixed into a pile of old junk watches I'd bought online, and it is in excellent condition!
The watch is a large case analogue model based around the Citizen 1251 quartz movement. It has a 3 hand dial design, and there is a day and date window at the 3 o'clock position. There is also a rotating bezel with lock feature, so to turn it you need to press the bezel down first, reducing the chance of an accidental nudge. As this has a high water resistance, it unsurprisingly has a screw down crown too.
The case is large and more of a square shape, but is made of titanium, so is pretty light and comfortable to wear. The strap is thick and long, so is suitable for use over a diving suit, and it has the Professional Divers name printed onto the lower half. The buckle is printed too, with a table of no-decompression limits to be used while diving.
The back of the watch controls the usual mode number and construction material information. The unusual part is that there is a section with dates (1 for year, and 1 for months) which is used to show the battery change date - I don't know if this is when it was changed, or when it needed to be changed, but suggests that after the battery change, you may have been expected to replace the watch back too!
The full model number is 1251-215249. In terms of value, it seems that the watch commands a reasonably high price, often being put up for sale for over $2000.
UPDATE: I found that the watch was still for sale in the 1990 Citizen catalogue, and I've added a picture of the advert. The catalogue number was SPN56-0503, and it had a sales price of a rather massive ¥172,000!
Hallo. Can I use this photo for my publication about diver's watches? Of course, information about authorship will be given. Matthew
ReplyDeletecame across this great historical blog piece. my interest, having never known about this watch until this week is, i saw the 'reissue' by citizen of this watch in a duratect titanium 200m version. it's quite amazing and references this original piece, which is amazing and historical. grateful for this article and photos, and have ordered my updated reissue which is an eco-drive. i'm not at all a fan of quartz, but i have accepted the cool huge monster citizen divers with eco-drive mainly because up until this year, the mechanical movement they used in them was only the miyota 8200 which has no hacking and second hand stutter due to a 2nd drive wheel for the seconds hand. on a diver watch the stutter is meaningless, but the aesthetic is horrible. the eco-drive 'ticks' have always been pleasing with a softer/smoother tick, plus citizen has managed to align the ticks to be virtually on the exact seconds hash marks, rather than even seikos with ticks unaligned with the second hashmarks. so, having gone for one of these remakes, it's a pleasure to find a nice article with fotos on the original!
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