![]() ![]() Because of how the lume is applied on the dial as a droplet confined by the thin white border, when it begins to dim it does so unevenly it continues to shine in the middle of the plots after the edges have gone dark. A quick step outside on a sunny day (literally seconds) will leave the watch’s C3 Super-LumiNova ablaze for several minutes. The keys to lume excellence are charging speed, brightness, evenness, and duration the Omega Seammaster Professional 2254 excels at all four. One of the treats about the wave dial in black is how it plays with light, with the pattern seeming to disappear if the light misses it, but come alive when it hits. This serves as a subtle reminder to the wearer to go get in the water and use the watch the way it was meant to be used. On my Omega 2254, as on the original, it allows the dial to mirror the fluid curves of the case. The entire dial within the markers is embossed with the undulating pattern first introduced on the Bond SMP in 1993. The wave dial on the Omega Seamaster Professional 2254 has become iconic, and it remains in heavy use by Omega. As such, though, the insert is a bit more prone to the occasional nick and scratch. The bezel is aluminum, which was standard until the recent move to ceramic bezels. Form won out over function, and the watch may be worse for it. I’ve found that even with sweat on my hands, the bezel’s thinness and lack of texture makes setting it a challenge when water is involved, it’s simply game over. While the scalloped edge continues the watery form of the case, it also serves to make the bezel nigh on inoperable except in the driest conditions. The stainless steel bezel is sloped and features a scalloped edge with a black aluminum insert. For my part, I have never touched the HeV on my watch, as I fear that it would destroy the watch or unleash a mythical beast that would desolate the kingdoms of man. For the lay-wearer, it is just another protuberance to catch your watch on. And let’s now fully acknowledge the inanity of Omega-or any brand-including this function on a modern dive watch. Let’s give Omega a bit of leeway and say that globally there are 1500 people who conduct saturation dives. Ostensibly, the valve allows saturation divers-who remain at depth for weeks if not longer-to safely decompress as they return to the surface, without the watch exploding.Īs of 2015, 10% of US commercial divers were saturation divers, or 336 people. The screwdown crown (and caseback) provide for 300m for water resistance, but that doesn’t make the Omega-branded helium escape valve at 10 o’clock any less superfluous. The crown itself features an embossed Omega logo and in my opinion could stand to be a bit wider its length allows for adequate gripping, but there are times when I wish there was more to grab onto (#crowngirth). The 3 o’clock screwdown crown on the Seamaster Professional 300M is protected by guards that flow organically out of the case. The “SMP” was almost entirely new while the case featured the classic lyre lugs, the wave dial, handset, scalloped bezel, helium escape valve, and bracelet were all new. In 1993, after what can only be described as a 30-year identity crisis, the Omega Seamaster Professional 300M was released. The ensuing decades saw the Seamaster line expand into a number of models and sub-lines, including soccer timers, quartz dress watches, and the legendary behemoth that was the Ploprof. Ironically only good to a depth of 200m, the Seamaster 300 is the aesthetic forebear of modern Seamaster dive watches. Even then, though, it was solely not directed at waterfaring adventurers and was put forth as a watch suitable for “town, sea, and country.”įast forward to 1957, when scuba diving was taking the world by storm and Omega released the Seamaster 300 (and the Speedmaster, which you may have heard of). ![]() Thanks to a new-to-Omega rubber gasket system, the Seamaster could reach depths of up to 60m. Originally released in 1948 to coincide with the brand’s centennial, the Seamaster was based loosely on the waterproof watches Omega produced for the British Royal Navy during World War II. ![]() The Seamaster is Omega’s longest running line. ![]()
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