#Seiko Prospex King Turtle Diver's Watch
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Seiko Prospex King Turtle automatic SRPE05K1 divers’ watch is equipped with a sapphire crystal for better resistance against scratches and scuffs and a screwed case back to protect the stainless-steel case from impacts. Long-dive divers receive a high-quality “King Turtle” dive watch. This new Prospex timepiece is automatic, which means it doesn’t require any battery to operate. Now there is no need for a battery change, ever! And with a 45mm case diameter, this watch has enough wrist presence to make any fashion aficionado jealous.
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Hands-on – The Seiko Prospex Diver’s King Samurai SRPE35K1 & SRPE37K1
Hands-on – The Seiko Prospex Diver’s King Samurai SRPE35K1 & SRPE37K1
Turtle, Willard, Tuna, Monster, Shogun… And of course, Samurai. This proliferation of nicknames for Seiko’s diver’s watches shows mostly the affection collectors and enthusiasts have for these rugged, well-built, and accessible sports watches (and also a certain lack of charm in Seiko’s nomenclature…) Recently, something new has started to be seen next to these names, […]
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^@!^ New Seiko Automatic Prospex King Turtle Divers 200M Men's Watch SRPE05 US Market https://ift.tt/2Yd5yML
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Conquer the Depths with Seiko Prospex King Turtle: The Ultimate Diving Companion
For avid divers and watch enthusiasts, the Seiko Prospex King Turtle is a timepiece that combines robust functionality with impressive design. Crafted specifically for underwater exploration, this remarkable dive watch from Seiko's Prospex collection has gained a reputation as the ultimate diving companion. In this blog post, we will delve into the exceptional features that make the Seiko Prospex King Turtle SRPE05K1 an indispensable tool for conquering the depths of the ocean.
Uncompromising Durability: The Seiko Prospex King Turtle is built to withstand the harshest underwater conditions. Its rugged stainless steel case, coupled with a scratch-resistant Hardlex crystal, ensures superior durability and protection against the challenges encountered during diving expeditions. This timepiece is designed to resist water pressure up to an impressive depth of 200 meters, making it a reliable companion for both recreational and professional divers.
Reliable Automatic Movement: Powered by precise automatic movement, the Seiko Prospex King Turtle guarantees reliable timekeeping without the need for batteries. The self-winding mechanism harnesses the wearer's natural motion to keep the watch running smoothly. This eliminates the worry of running out of power during long dives and ensures accurate time measurement even in the most demanding underwater environments.
Exceptional Legibility: The King Turtle boasts a dial designed for optimal legibility, even in dimly lit or murky underwater conditions. The large luminescent hands and markers provide excellent visibility, allowing divers to read the time at a glance. The addition of a magnified date window further enhances convenience and readability, ensuring that essential information is easily accessible during underwater explorations.
Dive-Ready Functionality: Seiko Prospex watches are renowned for their dive-specific features, and the King Turtle is no exception. It features a unidirectional rotating bezel, allowing divers to accurately measure elapsed time underwater. The screw-down crown and case back ensure water resistance, while the robust strap or bracelet options provide a secure and comfortable fit during aquatic adventures.
With its exceptional durability, reliable movement, exceptional legibility, and dive-ready functionality, the Seiko Prospex King Turtle SRPE05K1 stands as the ultimate diving companion. Whether you're exploring vibrant coral reefs or embarking on deep-sea expeditions, this timepiece is engineered to accompany you on your underwater conquests. Embrace the spirit of exploration and dive into the depths with confidence, knowing that the Seiko Prospex King Turtle is there to guide you every step of the way.
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Hands-on – The Seiko Prospex King Turtle SRPE03 & SRPE05
The Seiko Turtle is undoubtedly Seiko’s most famous and best-selling dive watch. Its combination of attractive dials, user-friendliness, robustness and excellent quality/price ratio has made the Turtle an all-time favourite. Having a best-selling watch like this is the dream of any brand, but it can also pose a risk. Watches have to evolve and finding the balance between a product that appeals to people and introducing improvements becomes a delicate task since any alterations will be judged more harshly than if the brand were to launch a brand new line. The Seiko Prospex King Turtle has done its homework well but has taken things a little further generating the usual controversy that arises when a watchmaking icon undergoes change.
Same shapes, new materials
Although the ‘King’ in the name of the Prospex King Turtle suggests a watch with kingly dimensions, this is not the case. The diameter of 45mm and height of 13mm are the same measurements of the original Turtle. Coupled with the relatively short but well-proportioned length (48mm), this watch is just as comfortable to wear as earlier Turtles. The top surfaces of the case are brushed, the sides are polished and the crown at 4 o’clock, as you would expect from a certified dive watch, is screwed down to ensure its water-resistance of 200m.
The redesigned bezel with more pronounced grooves is easier to grip and is now made of ceramic, a material that increases its durability exponentially and improves its presence. Rotating the bezel produces a solid reassuring click underscoring its vocation as a tool watch. The amount of luminescence is also greater enhancing legibility and giving the watch a more balanced design.
Another important upgrade in the new Seiko King Turtle is the replacement of the Hardlex with sapphire crystal. Although Hardlex, Seiko’s proprietary watch crystal, is renowned for its superior resistance to blows and impacts, nowadays the use of sapphire crystal is essential. If this normally translates into a higher price with Swiss watches, Seiko is proud of offering more for a lower price.
However, the most controversial aspect of the watch lies in another aspect regarding the sapphire crystal: now the Seiko King Turtle has a magnifying glass covering the day and date window (in two languages). The sapphire magnifier does not form part of the historical tradition of these watches. Technically, it is a challenge to find a loupe that really functions properly because there are many watches with magnifying crystals that do not enhance legibility. The magnifying glass also has to withstand water pressure of up to 250 metres, which is the real depth rating these watches have been tested. Legibility is faultless and it is evident that the sapphire used is of excellent quality. You can debate whether you like it or not, but luckily, the discussion will never revolve around its technical quality.
DECORATIVE TOUCHES
The second novelty – big novelty – of the Seiko King Turtle is the decoration of the dial. Seiko has opted for a square or waffle-shaped pattern on the dial that boosts the quality factor of the watch a great deal. Again, the application of the indices and the inscriptions on the dial reflects the high level of quality we associate with Seiko. The indices and hands are the same style as those featured on previous Turtles but the central seconds hand is now yellow to match the inscription ‘Divers 200m’. LumiBrite, Seiko’s proprietary luminescent paint that is considered the best in its class, is applied generously ensuring excellent readings in the dark.
For now, the launch models come in black and green but there will certainly be other combinations in the near future.
Renowned calibre
Powering the King Turtle is Seiko’s hearty 4R automatic calibre, a resilient durable calibre that performs within much stricter parameters (daily variations) than the specifications would indicate. The power reserve could use a few more hours because the autonomy is just 41 hours. As usual, the movement is covered by a metal caseback with an engraving of the Seiko wave.
Price
The King Turtle sits very well on the wrist. If we factor in the design upgrades, the experience is even more satisfying. The price of the Seiko Prospex King Turtle with a green silicone strap is EUR 610, the model with a steel bracelet retails for EUR 630. There will always be the doomsday predictors on forums who will complain that ‘Seiko has lost its mind’, that ‘Seiko is expensive’ and that Seiko is going to crash’. Personally, I think that the increase in price (between EUR 100 and 150) for the upgrades is entirely justified and am convinced that this new sovereign has a long reign ahead.
More information at seikowatches.com.
Technical specifications – Seiko Prospex Diver 200m “King Turtle”
Case: 45mm diameter x 13.2mm height – 47.7mm lug-to-lug – stainless steel case, brushed and polished – unidirectional notched bezel in steel, 60-minute insert in ceramic – sapphire crystal with magnifier – screw-down crown and caseback – 200m water-resistant
Dial: black or green with waffle pattern – hands and indexes with Lumibrite
Movement: Seiko calibre 4R36 – automatic – 24 jewels – 27.4mm – 21,600 vibrations/hour – 40 hours power reserve – hours, minutes, seconds, day-date
Bracelet/Strap: stainless steel 3-link bracelet with three-fold clasp with secure lock, push-button release with diving extension – or silicone strap with steel pin buckle
Reference: SRPE03K1 – black dial and bezel, steel bracelet SRPE05K1 – green dial, black bezel, green silicone
Price: EUR 630 – SRPE03K1 EUR 610 – SRPE05K1
The post Hands-on – The Seiko Prospex King Turtle SRPE03 & SRPE05 appeared first on Wristwatch Journal.
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Hands-on – Seiko Prospex ‘Captain Willard’ Reissues SPB151 and SPB153
There is more than one icon at Seiko… Far more. Not surprisingly, most of them are part of the Prospex collection and relate to the world of divers. Think 62Mas, Hi-Beat 300m and Tuna Professional (all of them recently re-created). And there’s the ‘Turtle’, the watch known under the reference 6105, a watch that has defined Seiko’s modern and accessible dive watch… and the watch that was worn in legendary 1979 movie Apocalypse Now. And today, the ‘Captain Willard’ could be yours, with the new SPB151 and SPB153.
Left: SPB151, black dial/bezel on steel bracelet. Right: SPB153, olive green dial/bezel on silicone strap
It isn’t the first time we see a re-edition of the 1970s Seiko ‘Turtle’ 6105. In fact, it is widely available in a modern interpretation with the Prospex Automatic Diver SRP series. Much more accurate was the watch launched at Baselworld 2019, the Seiko 1970 Diver’s Re-Creation SLA033. Superbly executed, manufactured almost to Grand Seiko standards – case with Zaratsu polishing, hands and indexes à la GS, top-tier 8L35 movement – and priced accordingly. In short, an exclusive collector’s piece. This year though, Seiko goes back to more familiar territories with a relatively accessible but truly cool re-edition of the 6105, just like Sheen in Apocalypse Now (while Brando was wearing his bezel-less GMT). But there’s more to the 1970s Turtle than its appearance on the silver screen.
TESTED IN REAL LIFE
Produced from 1968 onwards, the Seiko 6105 was a sturdy dive watch with a water-resistance of 150 metres. What caught everybody’s eye was the crown positioned at 4 o’clock (which was, in fact, used for the first time in the 1961 Seiko Silver Wave) and the big, lower crown protector. And this made the watch a true instrument for the wrist.
Naomi Uemura was a very popular Japanese adventurer, well respected for having achieved solo feats that up to that moment had only been accomplished by large teams. For instance, he undertook a one-man dog-sledge run from Greenland to Alaska, a journey of 12,000 km that took 18 months. He was the first to reach the North Pole alone. He was also the first to descend the Amazon river in a boat, and the first to ascend the North American Denali Mountain in winter – the third most prominent and solitary peak of the world. It was there where he disappeared when he was only 43 years old.
“In all the splendour of solitude, it is a test of myself, and one thing I loathe is to have to test myself in front of other people,” said Uemura. That was the reason why he undertook everything alone, a reason that unfortunately also deprived him of the help he needed at his most desperate moment. The reason I have been talking about Naomi Uemura’s exploits is that he was wearing a 6105. Not as part of a marketing campaign orchestrated by Seiko. It was just a watch that was robust, reliable and durable enough to accompany Uemura on his travels.
An example of Seiko 6105-8110 – image by Fratello Watches
CAPTAIN WILLARD
Despite Uemura’s heroic deeds, and even having a museum in Tokyo dedicated to him, the fame of the 6105 comes from fiction: it was the watch Captain Willard wore in the masterpiece Apocalypse Now. Not just a fancy prop, the watch actually portrayed a real wartime situation; the 6105 was sold in Asia during the Vietnam conflict and American soldiers had better – and cheaper – access to it than locals because they paid in dollars.
Photo by United Artists/Getty Images
Photo by Steve Schapiro/Corbis via Getty Images
The watch earned a solid reputation among the ranks for being a sturdy piece of equipment, to the point of becoming a favourite among the soldiers. When the soldiers returned to civilian life, so did the watch. Appearing throughout the movie on Captain Willard’s (Martin Sheen) wrist, the watch became an icon. The irony is that 6105 had gone out of production in 1977, two years before the movie hit cinemas around the world. The cry for a re-edition increased notably with the re-release of the movie in 2001 (known as Apocalypse Now Redux). And Seiko has taken its own sweet time to please its fans, first with the SLA033 and today with the SPB151 and SPB153.
The modern Prospex ‘Captain Willard’
While the SLA033 was a truly faithful re-edition of the original Turtle watch but not really attainable by most of the enthusiasts, the new Seiko Prospex ‘Captain Willard’ (not their official name but the obvious nickname given by the collecting community) are not only equally legit but also far more friendly when it comes to price and specs. And still, these are watches that are meant for more experienced collectors and not for a broad audience. Very wise move from Seiko.
So what do we have here? Basically, the modern version of the original 6105, with not only an identical design but also the same spirit of reliability, robustness and (relative) affordability. Remember that the 1970s Turtle watches were far from being luxury items. They were accessible watches made for action and proved that in the field. And as much as I enjoy the beauty of the SLA033, the new SPB151 and SPB153 are far more accurate when it comes to reviving the original concept of the 6105.
Case-wise, the Seiko Prospex ‘Captain Willard’ is built around a cushion-shaped central container with the crown positioned at 4 o’clock and protected by an asymmetrical guard – the shape of the watch earned its ‘turtle’ nickname. Circular-brushed on the upper surface and polished on the sides, the case is executed in the traditional Prospex way, clean and robust. Good news concerning the dimensions, as these two models are rather compact on the wrist, at 42.8mm in diameter when an SRP-series Turtle is about 45mm.
Being a proper dive watches, the Captain Willard SPB151 and SPB153 are topped by a unidirectional bezel in steel, with 120 firm clicks and a 60-minute scale. The insert is executed in anodized aluminium, and not in ceramic as seen in the recently launched King Turtle. A great choice considering the vintage inspiration of these watches, aluminium being more faithful and less modern-looking.
Two versions of the watch are available. First is the SPB151, which is worn on a steel bracelet. This is the classic execution and the closest to the original model, with its matte black dial and bezel. Second is the SPB153, which is worn on a black silicone strap. This version is equipped with an olive green sunburst dial and green bezel. While not historically accurate, this military attire perfectly suits this re-edition of the 6105 and is very (really) good looking in the metal, with nice reflections and a colour that changes depending on the ambient light.
Other than that, the Seiko Prospex ‘Captain Willard’ remain true to the 6105 with applied indexes and hands, as well as the scale on the bezel. All are modelled after this 1970s watch and filled with the ultra-luminous proprietary LumiBrite material. Also noticeable is the sapphire crystal on top, which features a large bevel on its periphery. Once again this is faithful to the mineral crystal found on the original version.
Under the screwed caseback, guaranteeing a 200m water-resistance together with the screw-down crown, is a well-known automatic movement. The calibre 6R35 is Seiko’s mid-range movement, found in both Presage and Prospex models. It beats at 3Hz and offers a comfortable power reserve of 70 hours when fully wound.
As said, the Black SPB151 is equipped with a 3-link stainless steel bracelet, closed by a folding clasp with diving extension. The Olive Green SPB153 comes on a newly designed silicone strap, with a nice pattern and soft texture. It is closed by a steel pin buckle.
Thoughts
I usually try not to be overly enthusiastic when reviewing a watch, or at least I try to remain objective… Sadly, here it isn’t the case. As hard as I try, I can’t find anything I don’t like about the new Seiko Prospex ‘Captain Willard’. They are faithful to the original, robust, superbly executed for the price and really handsome – especially that Olive Green SPB153 version. I mean, it ticks all the boxes: design, cool factor, price, history, relatively compact size… A couple of years ago, only unofficial mods would have looked that good. But here, it will be widely available and produced by one of the largest brands on the market. Respect!
Price and availability
The Seiko Prospex ‘Captain Willard’ SPB151 and SPB153 will be available soon (later in June 2020) and priced at USD 1,300/EUR 1,350 for the SPB151 and USD 1,100/EUR 1,150 for the SPB153. More details at seikowatches.com.
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