I reviewed
the Deaumar Ensign prototype just before its launch in February. I
liked its looks and declared it to be an impressive value, but despite
my doubtless invaluable endorsement, it failed to fund on Kickstarter.
Fortunately, Deaumar
continued pre-sales on its own and secured enough to see it through to
production. Now, Ensigns are shipping out to their owners and a new
model, the Chronova, is on its way. In anticipation of the launch,
Deaumar sent me a new blue Ensign and a prototype Chronova for review.

Ensign
Like the prototype, the final
version is a 200m dress diver with a Seiko 4R36 automatic in a 42mm
stainless steel case. Features include a screw down crown, domed
sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating, and a solid link bracelet
with a signed clasp. Short, integrated lugs keep the length to a
compact 46mm, which makes for a tidy fit on smaller wrists without
sacrificing presence. I was taken with the shimmering blue dial and
plodded markers on the prototype and the final is no different. The
final watch stays true to the prototype but has been upgraded with solid
end links, a solid two-piece clasp, and it trades the printed aluminum
bezel insert for glossy, engraved ceramic.
Deaumar had always planned for solid
links, but the ceramic was a later addition. It vastly improves the
watch. There is nothing inherently bad about aluminum, but I have grown
to love the slick look and high scratch resistance of ceramic. My only
real criticism of the prototype was the fat font printed in silver on
the bezel. The new insert does away with this. The engraved markers are
better proportioned than the old ones, and the white color is a better
match to the markers on the dial.
Of course, the price has changed as
well. You could pre-order the Ensign for £131 GBP, or about $189 USD at
the time. The watch is now £249 GBP, which thanks to a favorable
exchange rate, is just over $403 USD. Perhaps not the bargain it was
before, but still a fair price for a satisfying watch.
Chronova
Now, let's move on to the new one.
Like its stablemate, it uses a Seiko movement, but this time it is the
VK63 MechaQuartz, a popular hybrid movement that marries a quartz
timekeeper to a mechanical chronograph module. This combination yields a
reliable, inexpensive movement with a smooth, 1/5 second sweep and
crisp snap back on reset.
The stainless steel case measures
42mm wide and 51mm long. Its upper surface is brushed, the sides and
bezel are polished, and a polished chamfer cuts along the the outer edge
of the curved lugs. I like a combination of brushed and polished
finishes, and this is no exception, but I would have preferred brushed
sides to highlight like right chamfer. Long lugs make it wear slightly
larger than the Ensign, but one would hardly call it oversized. I found
it perfectly comfortable on my 6.5" wrist, and had no difficulty wearing
it with a buttoned cuff. The crown is signed, and an engraving of a
LeMans racer decorates the case back.
Chronographs are sports watches, so
while I do not expect the same degree of toughness found in dive or tool
watches, I do appreciate it when they can take some lumps. The Chronova
meets the standard with a sapphire crystal and 100m water resistance.
The Chronova's H-link bracelet is nearly identical to the Ensign's. Of
course, the end links are a different shape, but they share the same
finish combination, solid links, and split link pins. It is 22mm wide,
tapering to a 20mm signed clasp. Like the Ensign prototype, the
preproduction Chronova has folded end links that will be upgraded in
production.
Deaumar offers the Chronova in
several colors, including a stealthy PVD black, but I requested a gold
dial with a red and blue tachymeter index, a color scheme commonly
associated with the beloved Seiko 6139-6002
worn by Colonel William Pogue on an 84-day NASA space mission. Not
coincidentally, the gold Chronova is called "Pogo." An applied and
polished logo and baton markers with beveled ends lend welcome dimension
to the face. Deaumar's 1920's style typeface carries this treatment
particularly well. Blue index rings surround the three sub dials. Baton
hands are polished, and lume filled, while the second hand and sub dial
needles are bright red. A framed, black-on-white date window tucks in at
4:30, a placement that does not interfere with an of the other
elements. Overall, it is a successful design, effectively marrying the
sporty red and blue elements with the fancier metallic gold and bright
work.
Pre-orders open on November 3, at
6:00 pm GMT with delivery expected in March. 2017. The pre-order price
is £249.99 ($. USD) not including 20% VAT for EU buyers.
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