Welcome to Deep Dive, in which we test dive watches both new and vintage beneath the waves in some of the world’s most beautiful locations. This time, we’re underwater with the Supermarine S2000, a high-tech modern diver from famed British manufacturer Bremont.
What is to be gained from SCUBA diving with a mechanical watch? I’ve struggled with this question, even doubting the enterprise, but my hunch was that there was value in it. So I kept diving with watches, kept writing up my findings, and I’ve finally come to realize something that feels important: the aesthetics of a dive watch will never exceed the prowess of its functionality.
How would you feel about a Land Rover Defender that had the mechanical guts of a Honda Civic? A Ferrari with a VW 4-cylinder engine? What about a chromed-up, air-brushed, fancy-ass espresso machine that only made lame drip coffee? How about a leaky boat?
Herein lies the crux of why the Bremont Supermarine S2000 ($5,5995) is such a compelling dive watch: its functionality underwater easily matches its tasty aesthetics. The S2000 is in the same class as a real Defender, a real Ferrari, an actual La Marzocco espresso machine. We may never take a Ferrari up over 200mph, and we will (hopefully) never rely on a mechanical watch while diving, but knowing that these machines — however beautiful — can deliver as machines is a major part of their sex appeal. Their functionality doesn’t just amplify their beauty; it is essential to it.

The Bremont S2000 As a Desk Diver
For well over a decade, Bremont has consistently created colorways that delicately balance pop and restraint. Moreover, their colorways are warm and inviting, like hygee on the wrist or staring at a campfire. Specifically, it’s been Bremont’s restrained use of red on small details — here the bezel pip, the top of the rehaut, and the tip of the lollipop seconds hand — that’s so compelling. The other splash of color comes from the tip of the minute hand matching the 20-minute timing array under the sapphire bezel, a design move that creates a sense of intention and unity in this otherwise monochromatic watch.
The dial is a beauty, using vintage-inspired round and rectangular markers, a raised and etched center sector that contains the white text, a discrete and nicely framed date window, and a 60-minute rehaut. The hands are proportionately large, and divided into sections that are filled with ultra-bright Super-LumiNova.