Wearables

Breitling Superocean Chronograph M2000 is water-resistant to 2,000 m

Breitling Superocean Chronograph M2000 is water-resistant to 2,000 m
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph is rated to 2,000 m (6,600 ft)
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph is rated to 2,000 m (6,600 ft)
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph is available in s special black edition
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph is available in s special black edition
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph is rated to 2,000 m (6,600 ft)
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph is rated to 2,000 m (6,600 ft)
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has a ratcheted bezel
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has a ratcheted bezel
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph uses magnetic pushpieces instead of buttons
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph uses magnetic pushpieces instead of buttons
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has a helium venting valve
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has a helium venting valve
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has a double-gasketed crown
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has a double-gasketed crown
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph dial
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph dial
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has luminescent markers and hands
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The Superocean M2000 Chronograph has luminescent markers and hands
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Breitling appears to be targeting a pretty niche market with its Superocean Chronograph M2000. It might look like just another upmarket diving watch, but this particular timepiece is rated water-resistant to depths of 2,000 m (6,600 ft), so it seems to be aimed at record-breaking mixed-gas deep-sea divers and people who would take comfort in knowing that the watch they lost overboard is still ticking on the bottom of the ocean.

The main function of a diving watch is very simple; to keep water out, so it can keep working. The problem is that even electronic diving watches need holes in the case for buttons to control the movement. Ideally, the case should be one solid piece of metal for maximum strength, but the holes needed for the buttons are weak spots where water can seep in and quickly cause damage. The Superocean M2000 gets around this by completely eliminating the buttons.

The Superocean's 46-mm steel case has a screw-in back, a 4-mm thick, glare-proof, cambered sapphire crystal, and a screw-locked, double-gasketed crown, but no buttons. Instead, it is controlled through the metal of the case by means of magnetic pushpieces. Since there are no holes, the case is much stronger and watertight even at extreme depths. There's also a decompression valve that vents any helium that might have seeped inside during a visit to a decompression chamber on a mixed gas dive and would damage the timepiece by blowing up the case like a balloon on a return to surface pressure.

The Superocean M2000 Chronograph dial
The Superocean M2000 Chronograph dial

Like all classic diving watches, the Superocean has luminescent, oversized hands and hour markers that are easy and unambiguous to read in dim underwater light, and the black rubber-molded bezel is ratcheted to only move anti-clockwise, so that if it's bumped, it will show a greater elapsed dive time instead of a shorter one, which could be dangerous during decompression.

The SuperQuartz, thermocompensated quartz electronic movement is chronometer certified by the Swiss Official Chronometer Testing Institute (COSC) and Breitling says it's 10 times more accurate than a standard quartz movement. It has a fast-action timezone change feature, and is a chronograph capable of recording down to a tenth of a second and up to 12 hours. In addition, the watch comes with a choice of a leather, Diver Pro, Ocean Racer, or Professional III strap.

The Superocean M2000 is priced at US$3,575 and is available in polished steel or a special Blacksteel edition limited to 250 units, which feaure a satin-brushed steel case in black made by a high-resistance carbon-based treatment and a white-edged black leather strap.

Source: Breitling

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4 comments
4 comments
Playability
I had a Casio once that was water resistant to 50m. While grateful, I reflected that in no way was I water resistant to such a depth.
piperTom
Rated at 6600 feet?!! What's the point? I am not rated for even a tenth of that. Who do they think will be wearing it?
Jan Riedijk
I do not understand this so much... I possess a genuine Breitling that is rated 10000 feet (3000 m) deep...
guzmanchinky
My Tag Heuer is rated to 500m. I'm rated to 40m.