Welcome to Watches You Should Know, a biweekly column highlighting little-known watches with interesting backstories and unexpected influence. This week: the Zodiac Sea Wolf.
The heritage associated with the first dive watches doesn’t have to cost you many thousands of dollars. That’s what you’ll pay for the descendants of the Rolex Submariner or the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms which, in 1953, helped introduce the world to the dive watch as we know it today. A much more affordable way to enjoy that history, however, is via the oft-forgotten but venerable Zodiac Sea Wolf, introduced the very same year. Whether you’re talking about a vintage piece or a watch from the modern brand, a Zodiac is the real deal and offers serious value.
More Watches You Should Know
• Glycine Airman
• Eterna Super Kon-Tiki
• Mido Ocean Star Powerwind
1953 saw the introduction of the first dive watches with the features and style we recognize today, but they weren’t the first dive watches outright — there had already been decades of experimentation with water-resistant watch cases. Notably, the 1922 Rolex Submarine encased the watch’s head in a second watertight outer case of its own. Ten years later, the 135m water-resistant Omega Marine took a similar approach, and was considered the first commercially available watch made specifically for diving. (Its rectangular case, however, looks a lot closer to something like a Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso than to what you or I would consider a “dive watch.”)
Meanwhile, the 1927 Rolex Oyster used a screw-down crown to create a water-resistant watch without an outer case that survived prolonged exposure in the English Channel. This was the solution that proved enduring, and it’s still a feature of most dive (and other water-resistant) watches today. Meanwhile, Panerai’s early dive watches, which debuted in the 1930s, displayed the bold hour markers and luminant that are characteristic of today’s dive watches.
Thus, the disparate elements of dive watches were beginning to coalesce. However, it’s undoubtedly the rotating bezel that has become the dive watch’s most iconic feature. This more or less burst onto the scene in 1953 on the Rolex Submariner, the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms, and the Zodiac Sea Wolf (as well as on watches not made for diving, such as the Glycine Airman with its 24-hour bezel).
