Watches - Reviews, Information, and News

Watches - Reviews, Information, and News

Site Sections

Home

Watch Reviews

Watch News

Watch Talk

Watch Videos

Watch Forums

Marketplace

Watch Types

Aviation Watches

Dive Watches

Formal Watches

Hiking/Outdoors

Ladies' Watches

Military Watches

Sports/Fitness

Tech Watches

Travel Watches

Vintage Watches

Yachting Watches

Watch Accessories

Watch Brands

Abacus

Ball

Bathys

Bell & Ross

Breitling

Casio

Casio G-Shock

Casio Pathfinder

Citizen

Doxa

Fortis

Fossil

Highgear

Immersion

Junghans

Kobold

Luminox

MTM

Nike

Ocean7

Oceanus

Omega

Orient

Oris

Panerai

Patek Philippe

Rado

RGM

Rolex

Seiko

Sinn

Suunto

Swatch

Swiss Army

Tag Heuer

TechnoMarine

Timex

Tissot

Traser

Tutima

TX TechnoLuxury

Victorinox

Wenger

Yes Watches

Search
Watch Report
Web

Archives

November 2008

October 2008

September 2008

August 2008

July 2008

June 2008

May 2008

April 2008

March 2008

February 2008

January 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

September 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007

March 2007

February 2007

January 2007

December 2006

November 2006

September 2006

June 2006

May 2006

April 2006

March 2006

February 2006

January 2006

December 2005

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

July 2005

June 2005

May 2005

April 2005

March 2005

February 2005

January 2005

December 2004

November 2004

October 2004

September 2004

Where to Buy

Princeton Watches

Raymond Weil Watches

Kenmar Watches

Fashion Time

Links

BDWF

Breitling Source

Chad the Watch Guy

Chuck Maddox's Watch Blog

Dream Watches

Fratello Watches

Jura Watch Blog

Kenmar Watches

OmegaBlogger

PMWF

Professional Watches

Rolex Reference Page

Tiempo de Lujo (Spanish)

Timezone

Tiptop Watches

Watch Marketplace

Watching Horology

Watchismo Times

watchuseek

Wrist Dreams

Wrist Watch Review

Wrist Fashion

RSS 1.0
Atom
Google Sitemap
Marketplace •  Forums •  About •  Contact

Princeton Watches

Thousands of models, great prices on dive, sports, mechanicals & more since 1997.

Kenmar Watches

Authorized dealer. Over 150 brands. Best deals, best service. Nobody Beats Us.

Fashion Time

Authorized Dealer for over 50 brands since 1992 with 20 retail locations.

Review of the Traser Classic Automatic

December 13, 2007
Traser Classic Automatic

View the Traser Classic Automatic Photo Gallery.

For way too long now, I've been lusting after a watch with H3 tritium vials. I've always been a sucker for things that glow in the dark (my first watch was the original Timex Indiglo, after all), and luminescence is a big part of why I collect dive watches. A friend of mine recently bought a Ball Fireman, and after being completely mesmerized by the little glowing glass tubes inside, I decided it was time to get serious about tritium.

I looked at everything from Ball to Luminox, however my curiosity was particularly piqued by Traser H3 Watches. Traser is owned by mb-microtec, the company that actually holds the patent for tritium H3 illumination technology. They have an entire lineup of watches that include divers, chronographs, and military watches. Buried deep in their web site I found the Traser Classic series: plain and simple stainless steel watches that house the fantastic ETA 2824 movement — the same movement found in my Bathys 100 Fathom and my Tissot Seastar 1000.

The Classic Automatic is the only automatic model in Traser's lineup, and it comes in four styles:

  1. Stainless steel with a white dial.
  2. Stainless steel with a black dial.
  3. PVD with a black dial.
  4. PVD with a black dial and blue tritium tubes.

Coincidentally, my collection needed a white dialed watch, so the decision was easy.

The watch came packaged in a very cheap and flimsy box that was marked "Traser H3". Normally I would deduct some serious points for inferior packaging, but for what I paid, I was willing to look the other way. Inside, I was pleased to find a great looking, simple, and well manufactured watch on a 22mm solid steel bracelet with SELs (solid end links, which my $500 Tissot Seastar 1000 doesn't even have). The Classic is 40mm wide and fits my medium sized wrist very well. The crown engages with a mechanical smoothness very similar to my Bathys, and can also be used to quick-set the date. This is not a divers watch so the crown does not screw down, but the case back does, and Traser claims 100 meters (330 feet) of water resistance.

The watch has a simple printed dial that is easy to read, and the chapter ring houses twelve tritium tubes as low-light hour markers. The case is simple yet robust, and because of the increased thickness of the tritium hands, the watch has an interesting depth to it. Topping it all off is a scratch-resistant synthetic sapphire crystal.

To summarize:

All this for a very reasonable $350 USD. When I ordered the watch, I was half expecting all kinds of trickery like a cheap bracelet (nope), knock-off movement (nope), or dollar-store build quality (not at all). For $350 USD, you can order a great watch with a Swiss automatic movement that is not refurbished or grey-market in any way. The Traser Classic Automatic really stands out as a unique and impressive deal on a Swiss automatic watch.

Visit the Traser web site for information about finding an authorized dealer.

View the Traser Classic Automatic Photo Gallery.

By James Stacey.

» Discuss this article in the Watch Report Forums
» Buy and sell watches in the Watch Report Marketplace

« Review of the Casio G-Shock Giez 1000BJ Home Review of the Phosphor E Ink Watch »