Welcome to Watches You Should Know, a biweekly column highlighting important or little-known watches with interesting backstories and unexpected influence. This week: the Bulova Lunar Pilot.
There’s the Moonwatch, and then there’s the other Moonwatch. The famous Omega Speedmaster’s story has been told and retold, but a lesser-known chronograph made by Bulova that also went to the Moon on a NASA mission offers a cool and unique link to that iconic adventure. The Lunar Pilot is the modern version of that watch (reviewed here), and it offers a genuine “Moonwatch” experience for just a few hundred bucks.
How Bulova’s Chronograph Went to the Moon
Unlike the case with Speedmasters, you won’t really find vintage variations of the Bulova Lunar Pilot very easily. That’s because it was produced only as a prototype and was all but unknown until relatively recently — and much about its story remains murky and contested. What we do know is that the original surfaced in 2015 for auction by the astronaut who wore it himself.

Dave Scott was among three crew members aboard the Apollo 15 in 1971 — just two years after the first and most famous lunar mission of 1969. Following a second round of NASA trials for watch candidates, the Speedmaster was selected again and issued to all astronauts. The crew was allowed to bring some personal effects, however, and it’s well established that Scott wore his Bulova-provided backup watch on the Moon after the crystal popped off his issued Speedmaster.