Up Close with the Omega Seamaster 300 SPECTRE (Review & Original Photos)

Prominent on Daniel Craig's wrist throughout the recent James Bond instalment Spectre is the Omega Seamaster 300 Spectre limited edition. We take a look at the latest 007 wristwatch. 

At a critical juncture in Spectre the Omega Seamaster 300 on James Bond’s wrist does it thing, allowing the spy a narrow escape from a painful demise. The Seamaster 300 Spectre available to the public lacks the volatile properties of the fictional version, but is nonetheless a satisfying combination of vintage-inspired styling and a high-tech movement.

Actually the second, but more prominent, wristwatch worn by Craig in Spectre (the first was the Seamaster Aqua Terra >15,007 Gauss), the Seamaster 300 Spectre is a variant of the Seamaster 300. It’s a retro-style dive watch modelled on the reference CK2913 of 1957, Omega’s first modern day dive watch.

Much like the record-breaking Tudor Black Bay One, the Seamaster 300 Spectre is a pastiche of elements from vintage dive watches. Although it’s a medley, the result works well. The Spectre edition is similar to the ordinary model, but with tweaks that make it a bit more novel, and a more vintage feel. To start with the bezel is a bidirectional 12-hour bezel – and this plays a role in the movie – instead of the typical elapsed time dive standard for dive watches. Able to track second time zone (somewhat crudely since it can’t distinguish between night and day), the 12-hour bezel is black ceramic, meaning it’s scratch resistant though its glossy finish is at odds with the vintage look.

Instead of the lance-shaped seconds hand, the Seamaster 300 Spectre has a lollipop hand, a feature found on early models of the vintage Seamaster 300. And the 12 o’clock marker has been replaced by an enlarged Omega and Seamaster logo, which is surprisingly unobtrusive despite its size.

The dial has a matte, grained finish with a sandwich construction, so the Super-Luminova is on a plate underneath the dial, which has apertures cut out for the markers. As is the fashion for such retro-style watches, the luminous material on the dial and hands is ivory to mimic the patina on actual vintage watches.

Polished on the top and brushed on the side, the case is neatly finished. It’s identical to the standard model, 41mm in diameter, which as Goldilocks would put it, is just right. Because the bezel is wide and the dial dark, it actually seems smaller than 41mm on the wrist, which suits the vintage look well.

Although the aesthetic leans heavily on the past, the movement is as good as it gets in terms of technology. The Master Co-Axial calibre 8400 is equipped with all the features Omega has developed in recent years, including exceptional magnetism resistance thanks to Si14 silicon hairspring and patented alloys.

The movement is immune to magnetic fields of up to 15,000 Gauss, equivalent to that generated by smaller magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines, a level that would stop an ordinary timepiece. And unlike other magnetism resistance movements that rely on soft iron shielding to protect the movement, the calibre 8400 can be seen through the sapphire case back since its magnetism resistance is due to the materials used in its construction.

Decorated attractively, but obviously by machine, the style of the movement is characteristic of the current generation of Omega calibres. It’s finished with a radial striping, with blackened screw heads and red filling for all the engraved text.

The Seamaster 300 Spectre is packaged with a black and grey stripe NATO strap, as well as a steel bracelet. It’s worth noting the steel bracelet is entirely brushed, giving it a more appealing and appropriate look than the bracelet on the ordinary model, which has polished centre links.

The Seamaster 300 Spectre is limited to 7007 pieces, an enormous number by most standards but likely just enough since Omega is an enormous brand and James Bond is an even larger franchise. Even though so many will be made, none will likely be left on the shelves in a year’s time. It’s priced at SFr6300 and in Singapore, it’s S$9800. That’s an acceptable 15% premium over the ordinary Seamaster 300.


 

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