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Shop By Brand :: Dive Watches |
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Dive Watches
Our collection of Dive Watches includes watches from Luminox, Chase-Durer, Sector, and TechnoMarine. A Dive Watch is used with a depth gauge for decompression monitoring on decompression tables, when going scuba diving. The Dive Watch has become a popular style today, and continues to be a hot fashion trend.
Dive Watches come in handy when scuba diving, because they allow the diver to keep track of their total time underwater, and in addition, often having various monitoring devices and advanced features.
In the roiling sea of wristwatches, dive watches occupy a rarefied island all their own. Sure, grand complications may seduce with sophisticated movements and artfully cluttered dials. Multiple time-zone pieces have their appeal for world travelers. Ladies watches have that svelte and jewel-draped lusciousness, while big and boldly colored fashion watches are the latest necessary accessory of the ever-burgeoning celebrity class. But dive watches have that certain something that makes them stand out on a crowded reef or jam-packed commuter train. In a word (or two), they're cool.
Not just "water-resistant-down-to-some-absurd-depth" cool, but the kind of cool that pegs the wearer as a man or woman of action. Strap a dive watch to your wrist and suddenly you're someone who can go deep; who could risk the bends; who may have faced treacherous weather, hostile sea creatures or near disaster on the open waves and--with a little help from your dive watch--lived to tell about it. Now that's cool.
Most dive watches never make it anywhere near the water, of course. "Most consumers like dive watches for their attributes, even if they don't understand what they are," says Andrew Block, a senior vice president at Tourneau, the international watch retailer. "Even if you never get your dive watch wet, it's nice to know that it could survive up to 2,000 meters." Block notes that one out of every five watches manufactured today has some sort of dive function: water resistance, for instance, or a rotating bezel for timing the amount of oxygen you have left in your tank--or, more likely, the time left until your next meeting.
For all their sophisticated functions, however, recent advancements in dive technology have lately relinquished dive watches to the role of redundancy. For many divers, they're a handy double check of what the console on their regulator is already telling them.
There are basically two types of dive watches on the market: those with the attributes and those with the computers. The former are much more about style than function, produced by high-gloss watchmakers with basic features including water resistance, a unidirectional rotating bezel and brilliant luminescence. The latter, on the other hand, offer a world of sophisticated functions to help divers track their underwater status, such as water temperature and depth readings; separate gauges for timing the breathing mixture in one's tank; and various alarms to warn of timely doom. Details can often be downloaded from such dive watches onto a personal computer for later analysis or sharing online--if you really must. |
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