These Rare Dive Watches Were Designed to Help Save Lives

Before there were dive computers, this style of watch was all that stood between a diver and a potentially fatal case of the bends.

vulcain dive watch closeupVulcain

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SCUBA diving has always been a sport of measurement.

Whether it’s getting a reading on depth, determining the correct gas mixture or recording time spent underwater, accurate calculations can mean the difference between a successful dive and a potentially fatal one.

Because the stakes are so high, the majority of contemporary divers leave little to chance and rely on digital dive computers for both technical and basic dives. But this wasn’t always the case.

Not all that long ago, divers put their faith in dive watches with specially designed dials and bezels. These tools, used in conjunction with depth charts, helped divers measure their no-decompression time (the time they could spend at a particular depth without needing to decompress before ascending) as well as their decompression time (time spent at depth stages before resurfacing).

vintage mido dive watch
Mido’s “Rainbow Diver” from 1961 is likely the most recognizable decompression timer watch.
Mido

These types of specialized dive watches, often referred to as decompression timers, featured abbreviated — and often very colorful — dive tables on their dials that effectively told a diver how long to stop at each depth when making their decompression stops on the way to ascending.

Making the appropriate decompression stops is essential when completing a dive, as it allows the diver to off-gas the excess nitrogen their blood has absorbed during the dive. Failure to do so can result in decompression sickness, better known as the bends, which can be dangerous.

Decompression timer dive watches had some popularity in the 1960s and ’70s before largely disappearing from the landscape. For decades, the only available examples were rare and on the vintage market.

The style is still quite rare but is in the midst of a comeback, as a handful of new decompression timers have hit the market in recent years. Some of these watches are vintage reissues, while others are brand-new models. But the one thing they all have in common is the quirky, life-saving feature left over from the days when tool watches were actually used as tools.

Mido Ocean Star Decompression Timer 1961

black mido dive watch with a rainbow dialMido

Mido Ocean Star Decompression Timer 1961

Specs

Case Size 40.5mm
Movement Mido Cal. 80 automatic (ETA base)
Water Resistance 200m

The best-known decompression timer of them all is Mido’s colorful take on the form. Nicknamed the “Rainbow Diver,” this exceptionally rare variant of the Ocean Star dive watch from the 1960s is known to fetch five figures on the vintage market — far more than any other watch from the steadfastly affordable Swiss brand.

In 2020, Mido kickstarted the modern decompression timer renaissance by reissuing the Rainbow Diver as a limited edition, granting a new generation of collectors access to the coolest watch it ever made — and for a bargain price. In 2024, the brand released a new version with a PVD black case and mesh bracelet, putting a more modern spin on this iconic vintage style.

Vulcain Cricket Nautical Heritage

vulcan watchVulcain

Vulcain Cricket Nautical Heritage

Specs

Case Size 42mm
Movement Vulcain Cricket Alarm Cal. V10 manual-wind
Water Resistance 300m

Vulcain is largely known for the Cricket dress watch, which debuted as the world’s first wristwatch with a mechanical alarm back in 1947. (The watch is also known as the “President’s Watch,” as Vulcain has traditionally gifted a Cricket to the U.S. Commander-in-chief.)

But Vulcain also made Cricket dive watches equipped with not only an alarm that could be used and heard underwater, but dive tables on their dials. The Cricket Nautical Heritage is a modern reissue of one of the Swiss brand’s mid-century decompression timer divers, and like its 1960s ancestor, the modern version features both a decompression timer dial and an underwater mechanical alarm.

Wolbrook Skindiver Decompression

wolbrook dive watchWolbrook

Wolbrook Skindiver Decompression

Specs

Case Size 40mm
Movement Miyota 8315 automatic
Water Resistance 150m

Wolbrook and its flagship Skindiver model were fairly well known back in the 1960s — Neil Armstrong was known to wear one — but the brand was one of many mechanical watchmakers to go extinct during the Quartz Crisis of the 1970s and ’80s. The recently revived brand is once again churning out affordable mechanical tool watches these days, most of which are reissues of vintage models.

This 2024 model borrows the general case and design of the classic Skindiver, but the dial is brand-new for Wolbrook. It uses the dive tables created for the French Marine Nationale (the French Navy) in 1990, marking the first time these tables have been printed on a watch.

Christopher Ward C65 Super Compressor Elite

christopher ward dive watchChristopher Ward

Christopher Ward C65 Super Compressor Elite

Specs

Case Size 41mm
Movement Sellita Cal. SW300-1 automatic
Water Resistance 150m

Christopher Ward has only existed as a brand for 20 years, so it obviously wasn’t around for the heyday of decompression timers. But that didn’t stop the affordable British favorite from making one of the best modern decompression timers today.

Released earlier this year, the C65 Super Compressor Elite is more than your standard decompression timer, as it features another mostly extinct feature from mid-century dive watches: a legitimate Super Compressor case. This type of case, invented in the 1950s, features a super-thin compression spring in the caseback that presses the case against the O-ring gasket to increase water resistance as you dive deeper.

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