Look at any scuba dive magazine, and you'll see plenty of full-page, full-color advertisements for dive
watches, touting their multiple benefits and professional endorsements.
Take the Oris ProDiver Chronograph, with automatic mechanical movement and helium valve, and
water-resistant to 3,300 feet. The Luminox Deep Dive Automatic is Swiss made and touted as the most
dependable watch used by the Coast Guard, Air Force and Navy SEALS. Ball's Engineer Master II Diver
Worldtime is endorsed by freediving champion Guillaume Nery, who uses it while diving under the icy
surface of Lake Long in the French Alps, and it has "self-powered micro gas lights that glow 100 times brighter than luminous paint for up to 25 years." The ad we saw for the Citizen Eco-Drive lists 13 features,
including light-powered technology, a screw-back case and screw-down crown, and an ISO certification, if
you care about that sort of thing. Then there is the Rolex Submariner, introduced in 1953 as the first watch
to be water resistant up to 300 feet, and now its "triple-seal triplock winding crown" make it resistant to
down to 1,000 feet.
All those sound good for anyone wanting to follow in James Cameron and Richard Branson's submarine-
exploring footsteps. But boy, are they expensive. Looking at online retail prices for these watches,
the Oris ProDiver averages around $3,500, the Ball watch prices range between $2,000 and $3,000, and
the Luminox averages $1,500. The Rolex Submariner is much higher, with an average retail price starting
at around $7,500 and easily going into five digits. We saw an 18-karat gold Submariner going online for
$21,000 - - and that was for a pre-owned one, not brand new. Compared to all those, the Citizen Eco-Drive
is a mere bargain, averaging $400.
But why do you need a dive watch, especially when dive computers are so prevalent now? There
must be a market for them, as manufacturers run full-page ads in dive magazines regularly. But priced
in the thousands of dollars, these watches seem more like flashy jewelry than essential dive gear, especially
for those use two dive computers. Can they still serve a purpose? Or are you just a total sucker for
buying one?
John Bantin, who regularly writes dive equipment reviews for our pages, says yes to the last question.
"A dive watch says something about a man just as diamonds do a woman. I own a Rolex, but it's safe at
home in the bedside drawer while I am in the Maldives diving. People buy expensive dive watches for the
same reason they buy expensive cars -- because they want them."
Mark Derrick, owner of Dive Gear Express in Pompano Beach, FL, doesn't even sell dive watches. "In
fact, I hesitate to even call those things 'dive watches'. They have nothing much to do with diving, they are
really just submersible wristwatches. As such, they're just jewelry, and experienced divers don't wear jewelry
when diving. The wrists are valuable real estate, which means we need them for a dive computer, a
backup, a compass and, if rebreather diving, a handset as well."
One person in the pro-watch corner is Colin Miller, a former Navy diver and currently a dive
medical officer and moderator of the dive watch forum at Watchuseek.com (which gets a high volume
of traffic). He says the number of divers he knows who eschew dive watches is equal to those
who do wear them, and he is one of the latter. "For diving, it's essential as a backup timer, both as
a bottom timer and to time dive excursions and safety stops. I use a dive computer, and I have a
backup computer in my BC pocket and a watch on my wrist to time my safety stops. While a watch,
a snorkel and a knife are viewed as optional gear for recreational divers, military divers are trained
to dive with them. They're support equipment, and I don't like to leave things to chance. You don't
want to abort a mission if your battery died or your computer malfunctioned. So a watch is essential
equipment as an old-school, low-tech backup."
But Miller agrees that pricey dive watches aren't any better than inexpensive ones. "The reason for
expensive dive watches is the reason for expensive cars. You can't get to work any faster in a Mercedes than
in a smart car. I own more Citizens than any other type of dive watch. Citizens and Seikos are great watches,
and they run from $150 to $300."
Note that there is a difference between a "dive watch" and a "bottom timer." Derrick says he sells bottom
timers because they continue to have a place in technical diving. "A bottom timer that automatically
begins counting runtime upon immersion and also keeps track of depth is not the same as a submersible
wristwatch. Modern digital bottom timers include a logging function, ascent rate monitor, maximum depth
indicator, and some include a digital compass. Particularly notable is that bottom timers are designed to be
easy to read, with large and often backlit displays. No diver wants to be on a dive at an equivalent narcotic
depth of 150 feet and trying to interpret what Mickey's hands mean. "
Whether you follow Miller's lead with a dive watch or Derrick's suggestion of a bottom timer, you need
to use either properly in case your dive computer goes on the blink -- and you'll need to remember how to
read dive tables. Miller recommends combining a dive watch or bottom timer with a depth gauge, a traditional
pressure gauge (or a combination depth/pressure gauge) and submersible dive tables so that you can continue a dive and finish it safely. The important thing is that you keep track of your decompression status
or dive profiles so you can switch comfortably from computer to tables.
Keeping track of your ascent rate is critical if your computer malfunctions. A 30-foot-per-minute ascent
rate means rising one foot every two seconds. By keeping a hand on the anchor line and your eyes on your
backup watch and depth gauge, you can manually track your ascent rate. But you can still count "a thousand
one, a thousand two," and accomplish the same thing.
For some divers, it's the history of the dive watch that appeals. "Remember that Rolex and Omega have
a long history in professional and sport diving," says Miller. "So there's the cachet that goes with those
names, which essentially created the dive watch as we know it today." Note that Rolex was the company
that got its watch taken down to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, attached to James Cameron's wrist.
And if you have an old dive watch lying around that you no longer use it, consider selling it. You may
be surprised by how much you could get for it. Back in the late 50s, a U.S. Navy doctor known to us only as
"Bob" bought a Rolex from the Navy Exchange on Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands. He only needed
a dive watch to time his air reserves so he reluctantly spent $70 on the Rolex, as that was the only watch in
stock. His wife was not happy. However, Bob wore the watch every day for 35 years before finally putting
it in a drawer, where it sat for another decade. Then last fall, he put the watch and some other items for auction
on eBay to get some extra cash for Christmas gifts. He started the bidding on his banged-up timepiece
at $9.95, but the bidding quickly went over the $30,000 mark.
Befuddled, Bob and his son did some research and discovered that his watch was a Rolex Submariner,
Ref 5510, the same model worn by Sean Connery in the James Bond classics Dr. No, Goldfinger and Thunderball,
and considered the rarest and most sought-after version of the watch. In his eBay auction listing, Bob wrote
that he didn't have any of the original papers, but that he hoped to get $50 or $100 for the thing. The final
selling price when the auction closed on December 4: $66,100. Bob's wife was probably pretty happy then.
- - Vanessa Richardson