
Nowadays, you can hardly throw a dead fish without hitting another new dive watch brand. The availability of Far East shops that will stamp out a few hundred watch cases based on a napkin sketch means that almost anyone with a little ambition and a small loan can start their own watch company. And there are many, with names and retro designs evoking the romance and adventure of the early days of diving. While it’s great to see such a swell in interest in timepieces and the entrepreneurial spirit so healthy, it’s also great to see an old name revived and a brand that is staying faithful to its heritage. Case in point: Aquadive and its Bathyscaphe dive watches in two sizes. I’ve been wearing the smaller Bathyscaphe 100 in stealthy black DLC trim for the past few months and have come away duly impressed.
Continues after the jump.
The Swiss brand, Aquadive, was popular in the 1960s and 70s and, as their name suggests, they specialized only in dive watches. Huge for their era, sturdy and affordable, Aquadive quickly became the brand of choice for recreational divers. Their innovative Time-Depth 50, with its integrated depth gauge and electronic movement cemented Aquadive’s name in the annals of great dive watches. Collectors hunt for Time-Depth 50s in good condition but, given their age and regular underwater use, they are scant. And while Aquadive produced other models over their brief history, the brand went the way of so many others when cheap Japanese quartz watches took hold of the market.
Aquadive relaunched with a splash last year, capitalizing on the surge in interest for vintage-inspired dive watches. In addition to a “new old stock” model that used actual cases from a 1960s model, the new owners of the Aquadive name reached into the company’s archives and pulled out the original plans for the Time-Depth 50 and used the exact case dimensions to create the flagship Bathyscaphe 300. But instead of a battery-powered movement, the watches are fitted with a self-winding Swiss ETA mechanical movement and, without its finicky depth gauge, the case is now upgraded to an astounding 3,000 meters of water resistance.

The Bathyscaphe 300 is a leviathan at 47mm across and, at 20mm thick, proved to be too big to handle, even in this era of oversized watches. So Aquadive wisely created a smaller version, the Bathyscaphe 100. Still no trembling flower, it clocks in at 43mm across and 15mm thick but the 49mm height means it is eminently wearable even on small wrists. The water resistance is less than its bigger brother’s, but still an impressive, and entirely superfluous 1,000 meters.