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Monday, February 13, 2012

Review of the Seiko Prospex SBDC011 Fieldmaster 6R15



This is my second purchase from Higuchi Japan (http://www.higuchi-inc.com/) as well as my second purchase under the Seiko Perspex brand. The Fieldmaster SBDC011 is one beautiful watch in my opinion. Designed with the Seiko Tuna Can body as inspiration, this watch has all the right balance.

After taking the watch box from the airfreight container, you would immediately notice that the box is different from the typical yellow colour display box common under the Perspex series of watches from Seiko. Instead of a square box, it is rectangle.


There is actually a covering for the actual display box. Once that is taken off, you can see the Seiko brand printed prominently on the box. The display box appears to be made of a reflective fabric like material - similar to silk.


Flipping open the box and you will able to feast your eyes on the watch. Apart from the watch, you also get 2 booklets, the instruction manual and the guarantee document.

As for the watch, it is one mother of a watch. Using the phone cable as reference, you can just imagine the size.


It is a fully automatic watch and comes with the 6R15 Seiko movement which has winding and hacking capabilities. SDBC011 comes with a thick leather strap. If you prefer a bracelet, you can try the SBDC013.

From the picture below you can see that the strap is tapered towards the buckle. The lug width is an unusual 21mm. It comes standard fitted with a double ridged leather strap with double stitching. The colour of the strap actually matches black dial very well although I suspect the strap will turn motley if it gets wet. This is problem with light coloured leather straps. I don't mind it to be put on dress watches but for a field watch that will face the rough and tumble of trails and adventure, black leather or rubber would be a better option.


The design of this watch that won me over is the Tuna Can design. The shroud exudes a feeling of strength and protection. Coupled with the brushed finish, the metal effect makes it more "macho".

It has a very busy face with a lot of information on the dial as well as the bezel. Unlike the Marinemaster (or other dive watches) series, the bezel on this Fieldmaster moves both ways and without any ratcheting action.   The friction that keeps the bezel at a certain point is just nice. Not that loose yet not that tight. The resistance is roughly equal to a dive bezel. I was made to understand from other watch forums that there is a rubber gasket underneath the bezel that provides the resistance.


The watch is fitted with a flat sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating. A fair amount of lume is provided, similar to the Marinemaster series. The crown in a screw-down and the date is between the 4 o'clock and 5 o'clock position. Having half the bezel in black while the rest in white helps make it a "GMT" capable watch as well.

In all honesty, I doubt I will ever use the compass function of the watch!! With GPS easily available now, this function is heading the same direction as slide-rulers with the advent of the digital calculators.

The width of the watch is 48 mm without the crown. It is also thick at 13.7 mm and weighs in at 223 gm. You need to be a certain body size to be able to carry this watch elegantly. 


It is a beautiful watch. With the strap spread out wide, it looks quite balanced.

Meanwhile, at the back casing, Seiko etched some important ground to air emergency signal codes. If you want to learn more, visit: http://dragon.sleepdeprived.ca/camping/camping_9.htm.


The crown with the "S" stamped on it is very classy. The picture shows you how thick this watch is.


Again, another reference to indicate the size of the watch. It covers 3 of my fingers easily.


Here is the watch on my wrist.


The signed panerai-like/size buckle balanced the large watch nicely. Good thing Seiko decided not to use the standard Seiko buckle for this watch.

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