When it comes to its history of military-issued dive watches, no one can match the British Royal Navy.
The UK’s aquatic armed forces were issued arguably the two most desirable mil-spec divers ever made: the Omega Seamaster 300 “Big Triangle” in the late 1960s, and the Rolex MilSub in the 1970s — not to mention some earlier Submariners in the 1950s and early ’60s.
But in 1980, the UK’ Ministry of Defence turned away from the big Swiss brands in favor or a small, homegrown company: Cabot Watch Company, better known as CWC. The British brand began by offering an automatic mil-spec diver that looked very similar to a Seamaster 300 — after all, they were both built from the same spec sheet — for two years before transitioning to a quartz-powered version in 1982.
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The relationship between CWC and the British military continues to this day, and the brand also offers civilians several versions of its divers, from vintage military reissues to more contemporary takes on the form.
Now, CWC has added another arrow to its quiver with an automatic diver with a look that’s best suited for Arctic missions.




