Breitling

2005, Yachting Superocean 'Slow Chronograph', Steel

Sold

A second iteration ref. 2005 Superocean ‘Slow Chronograph’ with yachting bezel. This dive watch features a minute scale-chronograph. As it runs too slowly for the human eye to observe, there’s a running indication above 6 o’clock. This example is entirely original, including the lume which has not been re-touched; Breitling’s mix for these turned minty over time, not cream. This is one of the most incredibly well-preserved examples we’ve seen, in case and dial. A very playful, colorful, quirky vintage diver that speaks to Breitling’s massive ambition in the 1960s.

ENQUIRE

Worth Reading

Breitling's ref. 2005 Superocean was a different solution to the dive watch problem, eccentric and well thought-through. This is the scarcely seen second or 'Yachting' iteration, entirely original (lume as well, Breitling's tritium mix for these dials all turned minty over time, not re-touched) and in remarkable condition. It's known as the 'Slow Chronograph', that massive, blocky chronograph hand you see measures minutes, not seconds. In fact, it's so slow that there's a luminous indicator just above to 6 to tell you that it's running, because it's too slow for the human eye to detect; black for disengaged, full lume for running, a small lume dot for paused. With this flamboyant yachting bezel, it's one of the most playful and vibrant vintage chronographs to wear.

There are two known iterations of the 2005 Superocean, the first with a normal tritium blend, diamond-shaped chronograph hand, and circular plots. This second iteration came a few years after and included two major updates aside from design. First, a movement change from a modified Venus 188 to a modified Valjoux 7731, both manual. But also a running seconds in full lume, which is very useful. Both are in a very modern 42mm case. The tritium mix change came toward the very end of the first iteration, but all second-gen watches with this funky squared off handset and indices featured what we're calling the 'minty' mix. The second iteration also introduced this explosive yachting countdown bezel, which screams summer.

The 2005 Superocean is increasingly viewed as a collector's darling, one could scour the market for years and not come across an example like this, which is as well-preserved as we've ever seen; NOS is largely meaningless, but this thing looks like a drawer-queen. And the 2005 just so happens to have one of the best fonts ever printed on a dial. That Superocean script above 6 looks like it equally be milled from titanium and fitted on the back of some modern hyper car, it is truly a thing a beauty. As is the whole watch. Playfully beautiful, quite innovative, and a massively overlooked corner of Breitling dive history: what's not to love here?

Condition

This example is in exemplary condition in all respects. To underscore from the worth reading section, this greenish-hue lume mix is original tritium, Breitling used a unique blend on these dials that aged in a much more minty tone than usual, these are original tritium applications and not relumed. The dial has no visible damage, all scripts are clear, and the tritium is all present. Its case is likely untouched, with exceptionally strong lugs. Its caseback has some scratches on the polished sections but that's about all to comment on here. The movement was serviced last year and is running well/within spec. It comes on the pictured tropic rubber strap.

Specifications

This watch is modeled on a relatively large 7.7 inch wrist.

  • Brand: Breitling
  • Model: Superocean
  • Reference: 2005
  • Size: 42
  • Year: c. 1970
  • Case Material:
  • Movement: Manual Breitling-Modified Valjoux 7731
  • Scope: Watch Only