MILITARY WATCHES OF THE WORLD: ISRAEL PT. II
In this second installment of Military Watches of the World: Israel, we pick things up in the 1970s, looking at divers issued to the IDF. You can read pt. I of this editorial right here. Lead image credit: Analog Shift
Jumping to 1970s dive watches, the timepiece that appears next on the scene is perhaps the best-known of IDF-issued watches: the cushion-cased Eterna Kon-Tiki Super. Issued beginning in 1970, this is the timepiece that would ultimately replace the Tudor Submariner on the wrists of Shayetet 13 commandos and other Shayetet operators (submariners, divers, etc.). With respect to S13, whether this change was a result of cost-cutting measures or the search for a more effective watch is unknown, but both are fair guesses.Â
These watches features a 41mm stainless steel cushion cases, black dials with tritium lume and a highly visible handset combining sword and baton shapes, a ratcheting dive bezel that?s easily gripped when wearing gloves, an oversize crown, and the Eterna-Matic automatic movement with 5-ball bearing rotor mount and a chronometer-grade accuracy adjusted to six positions, including temperature. This particular Eterna Kon-Tiki Super was, quite simply, one of the most robust automatic watches ever put to military use.
Credit: Analog Shift
Though numerous Kon Tiki Supers with supposed S13 provenance have been sold over the years, it?s the author?s belief that some of these may have been issued to Shayetet units other than S13. Case back mark...
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Introducing – The Bremont Terra Nova 40.5 Date Caramel Limited Edition
31-10-2024 04:00 - (
Luxury Watch )
