7 Greatest Military Watches of All Time | Armand The Watch Guy

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  • Опубліковано 10 чер 2024
  • In today's video, I would like to discuss 7 of the greatest and most influencial examples of military watch used since the beginning of the 20th Century. These watces have been used in theatres of war as varied as mine-hunting under the waves, to dogfights in the clouds and active duty on the ground in the Second World War.
    Featured Watches:
    - Trench Watches - 0:50
    - Italian Panerai Military Dive Watches - 4:51
    - German Flieger Watches - 8:33
    - British "Dirty Dozen" Watches - 13:26
    - French Type XX Chronograph - 18:33
    - Blancpain Fifty-Fathoms - 24:34
    - British Rolex Mil-Sub - 29:14
    For horological photography, follow me on on Instagram at: armand_the_watch_guy
    For any questions or business enquiries, please email me at: questionsforatwg@gmail.com
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 99

  • @joeq.publicus3616
    @joeq.publicus3616 5 років тому +35

    Another excellent video. You are without a doubt one of the best horological documentarians working today. I salute you good Sr.

  • @Deusmecumest
    @Deusmecumest 5 років тому +4

    This has to be one of my top 3 favorite videos of your channel. So far. Truly thanks for posting.

  • @teamhonn
    @teamhonn 5 років тому +3

    Thank you so much for taking the time to put these timeless documentary's together.

  • @bartmotorcycle
    @bartmotorcycle Рік тому

    Fascinating. Great to hear a real expert and student of history

  • @carlomarzot9654
    @carlomarzot9654 5 років тому +14

    Excellent chronological timeline of wristwatches - well researched. I’ve enjoyed it very much. Thank you.

  • @getoffmylawn8986
    @getoffmylawn8986 5 років тому +7

    Fascinating, Armand. One of your very best videos. As a military watch fan, this one is a keeper. Thank you.

  • @nyanates
    @nyanates 5 років тому +6

    Excellent video. My interest in vintage military watches has really increased lately. They have a rich history.

  • @jc944t
    @jc944t 5 років тому +15

    Great video. Being a military officer I appreciate how you captured the history behind the design of these watches. Hard to believe that Rolex and Omega watches were standard issue back in the day, certainly not the case now. Also great job on capturing influence of Hanhart which in my opinion is a very underrated German brand. Thank you!

    • @markwoods4574
      @markwoods4574 2 роки тому +1

      Hi James , the Omega and Rolex as you know is still used by the British Military however are it’s are Special Forces who use these excellent watches.

    • @phmwu7368
      @phmwu7368 11 місяців тому

      The days of the real toolwatch are gone ... all modern versions of iconic brands have become large bling !

  • @peterlewis3540
    @peterlewis3540 4 роки тому +2

    Extremely comprehensive video, and i listened intently throughout.
    Thank You for a great and informative lecture on the history of military watches over the years

  • @fullthrottlewrx
    @fullthrottlewrx 5 років тому +2

    Absolutely phenomenal video Armand! the depth of your explanations is hugely respectable. Fantastic research!

  • @donrogan2812
    @donrogan2812 5 років тому +2

    Another fantastic video!! Really appreciate all your efforts!! Thank you.

  • @Bergrgenjohannes
    @Bergrgenjohannes 5 років тому +1

    Lovely and educational as always. Loved the "Watchmakers four" on presenting the Dirty Dozens. It's all in the details.

  • @blueshirtbuddah1665
    @blueshirtbuddah1665 5 років тому +1

    Fascinating video Armand. Keep up the great work.

  • @WuBloodKin09
    @WuBloodKin09 5 років тому +3

    I appreciate the history and this editorial...amazing video!

  • @boydsargeant7496
    @boydsargeant7496 5 місяців тому

    Great video! Love all the watches, no favourites, want them all! I have one military watch, a Lemania from 1946 with a Tissot 27A movement. Would love more videos like this. Well done with all your pronunciations!

  • @chrisauge6802
    @chrisauge6802 5 років тому +2

    Thanks Armand! I really enjoyed this video!!!

  • @triples4good
    @triples4good 5 років тому +8

    One of your best videos to date. Superb.

  • @noelmurphy3450
    @noelmurphy3450 5 років тому +1

    Thank you very much for the very interesting and informative historical review Armand - Great stuff! Cheers Noel

  • @artagain8977
    @artagain8977 5 років тому +2

    Very interesting. Thanks for producing this.

  • @jackpurcell274
    @jackpurcell274 5 років тому +2

    Thank you for your research, I always learn so much

  • @OneTalaw
    @OneTalaw 5 років тому +6

    Very interesting, lots of information, much more information than many of the other watch reviews on UA-cam. Though I am always interested in reviews on one particular watch at a time or style i.e. field, aviation, racing, dive etc....

  • @PiersLortPhillips
    @PiersLortPhillips 5 років тому +6

    Fascinating. Thank you.

  • @herbhandyman8933
    @herbhandyman8933 5 років тому +4

    Fascinating ! I like the way those references just roll off your tongue.. Would be interesting to see a side by side of the Rolex - Omega - Rolex dive watches to see the progression of development. I have a Remontoir Cylindre 10 Rubis wristwatch my grandmother owned. It's a pocketwatch, hunter style with lugs soldered on. The XII is at the crown which is at the 3 o'clock position on the wrist. Seeing the pocketwatch conversions of WWI is revealing and poignant since she would have received the watch right during this period when she was a teenager in Bavaria . It has her maiden name engraved in the inside of the back cover. Keep up the great work.

  • @christophersteidinger7466
    @christophersteidinger7466 3 місяці тому

    I learn knowledge through the information of discussions of watches past and present interest interestingly thanks

  • @thewatchloungechris
    @thewatchloungechris 5 років тому +1

    Love the videos you can tell you do your research keep up the great work !

  • @mikeyoung2862
    @mikeyoung2862 5 років тому

    Very interesting, and a lot of research on your part. Many thanks

  • @mrg1911
    @mrg1911 5 років тому +2

    Great stuff, thank you!

  • @eyeheartsushi2212
    @eyeheartsushi2212 5 років тому

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @hughmckendrick3018
    @hughmckendrick3018 5 років тому +1

    Informative and entertaining.

  • @jimbegin6554
    @jimbegin6554 5 років тому

    Great! Thank you Armand.

  • @donnyboon2896
    @donnyboon2896 2 роки тому

    Very informative and data good to know.👍🏻

  • @markbyrum4743
    @markbyrum4743 3 роки тому

    Enjoyed the historical review. Good vid
    Keep at it!

  • @dimitriskekos
    @dimitriskekos 5 років тому +2

    excellent video .thx

  • @donutheist
    @donutheist 4 місяці тому

    I think the German KM watches deserve a place in the list. Simple and beautiful.

  • @mgmmaze
    @mgmmaze 5 років тому +1

    This video is amazing. I was in the Marines for 12 years I had s crappy timex but always wondered what was used before

  • @rohanbansal2324
    @rohanbansal2324 5 років тому +1

    Excellent video

  • @sergioromano4901
    @sergioromano4901 3 роки тому

    outstanding video!!

  • @auxiliary4023
    @auxiliary4023 2 роки тому +1

    What makes me chuckle about the Rolex milsubs is everyone out there is stolen property. The MOD don't hand out souvenirs when you leave the service and none I know of were sent to a MOD clearance auction. Food for thought. 🤐

  • @hughmckendrick3018
    @hughmckendrick3018 4 роки тому

    Excellent content.

  • @gregorybarry4564
    @gregorybarry4564 3 роки тому

    Excellent video.

  • @brianfuller7691
    @brianfuller7691 4 роки тому +1

    It all starts with trench watches and pilot watches during WW1. There was a huge stigma about men even wearing wristwatches pre-war but the War changed that. This was an awesome list and everyone of these watches is important to horological history. Always impressed by the details you present quite clearly. Thanks for mentioning the legendary Blancpain 50 Fathoms and the Rolex Mil-Sub. But the A-11 was not mentioned.

  • @tomotopic1007
    @tomotopic1007 11 місяців тому

    Very nice

  • @patrickjean-philippe7679
    @patrickjean-philippe7679 2 роки тому

    Great video. I have an IWC B.Uhr 52 SC

  • @markwoods4574
    @markwoods4574 2 роки тому +1

    As far as I’m aware “ The Omega Dirty Dozen Watch “ was the Army Commando ( My Late Grandfather was in 1 Commando ) , SAS , SBS watch

  • @roygardiner2229
    @roygardiner2229 5 років тому +2

    That was truly excellent. I shall have to watch this video several times, such is the amount of detailed information presented.
    As a side issue, despite my interest in these watches and the history of their development, I am not attracted to their aesthetic qualities, nor do I currently need the functions and protective elements of a military watch or a chronometer. So their obvious appeal and popularity in the mass market makes me somewhat of an outlier.

  • @Pierluigi_Di_Lorenzo
    @Pierluigi_Di_Lorenzo Місяць тому

    13:26 The Wehrmacht (German armed forces) had a very similar 'Dienstuhr' (service watch) which was produced by German and Swiss manufacturers.

  • @billcosgrave6232
    @billcosgrave6232 5 років тому +1

    Great!

  • @paulandsueroberts4121
    @paulandsueroberts4121 5 років тому

    A terrific vid as usual Armand.Note:The photo shown of British troops......the soldier 3rd on the left (sitting) was to lose his life later in the war.

  • @toddkennedy5714
    @toddkennedy5714 Рік тому

    I love the intro music. What is the name of the piece? Thanks!

  • @MVO884
    @MVO884 3 роки тому

    Thanks.

  • @hiker64012
    @hiker64012 3 роки тому

    I can tell you did quite a bit of research for this video, good job.

  • @paredair
    @paredair 5 років тому +4

    AIF issue watches for soldiers in WWI had leather caps that buttoned down over the dial - very popular with drovers after the war as well, because of all the dust in the Australian Outback...

  • @Sokol10
    @Sokol10 Місяць тому

    11:18 - The predecessor of "modern day NATO strap" is the (British) 1945 VB Hygienique strap, essentially the same basic design.

  • @gustavoholtz1
    @gustavoholtz1 7 місяців тому

    What does the letter T mean on the Rolex submariner at the end of the video?

  • @OneTalaw
    @OneTalaw 5 років тому +13

    I would very much like to see review on field watches, am particularly interested in Hamilton, as they seem to GIVE A LOT FOR THE MONEY.

  • @ForbinColossus
    @ForbinColossus 5 років тому

    @5:49 the Panarai you show for 1938 surely didnt have a California dial, did it?

  • @katahajimeudegarame2397
    @katahajimeudegarame2397 4 роки тому

    I just aquired a military CYMA Tavannes watch with black display and triangular 12´ index with dots ( B-Uhren type-a inspired ) 36 mm diam. and in very wearable condition (military steampunk kinda vibe) without noticible restoration except the crown wich i suspect it was replaced for civilian use (aviation watches have large unconfortable crowns), i think i found a history jewel for 165 buckaroos, what do you think?

  • @highdesertforester
    @highdesertforester 5 років тому +12

    My war was Vietnam and I don't know how you could overlook the Seiko 5, 6119-8100, which was sold by the thousands to US troops during that time. To me, that was the classic Military watch.

    • @sofijeffrey9797
      @sofijeffrey9797 5 років тому +3

      Vietnam was before my time. Thank you for your service! I love the Seiko 5s

  • @philipsdefreville6138
    @philipsdefreville6138 5 років тому +1

    Very nice look at military watches. You mentioned the Dirty Dozen watches as being shockproof. I don't believe that innovation existed at that time. The movements are actually quite delicate.

    • @brinkee7674
      @brinkee7674 2 роки тому

      Yes some were shock proof. I was also surprised though. There is a video of a restoration of a Helma AS1130, a watch of the WWII German Wehrmacht and it is also shockproof
      I'm not sure about the Dirty Dozen though as I have a Elgin 554 US WWII watch and don't believe i to be shock proof
      I was watching a video on a Vaer a12 which is a repro of the Dirty Dozen watch. It was a British watch I believe an Omega which did have a shockproof case

    • @Bravo-Too-Much
      @Bravo-Too-Much 9 місяців тому

      He said “shock troops” not “shock proof”. He was referring to more specific units that needed watches.

  • @georgeversluis8442
    @georgeversluis8442 Рік тому

    You did not mention the 7021/0 Tudor snowflake, the Rolex clone
    I have a couple, great machines

  • @LaserFocused
    @LaserFocused 4 роки тому +1

    What about Marathon Military watches..

  • @donutheist
    @donutheist 4 місяці тому

    Depollier predated Panerai in terms of underwater military watches.

  • @markphillips8097
    @markphillips8097 8 місяців тому

    Well you left out a few classics hamilton ,Bulova, benrus stocker and yale ,marathon

  • @davidthom7127
    @davidthom7127 4 роки тому

    I think your videos are AMAZING. But, when you are listing a dozen watch brands, can you please list them down below. I was trying to write them down quickly but you were saying them so fast that I had to go back and replay it over and over and over and over and over and over again, about a DOZEN times before I eventually got them all.

  • @gkelly941
    @gkelly941 3 роки тому

    My now-late friend who served a naval career in the submarine service corrected my pronunciation. Like you, I had always called it a "sub- mariner," but he informed me that in the service, men (and in his day, they were all men) who served in submarines were called "submarine-ers." Therefore, I wonder which is correct, and if there is any difference between the standard pronunciation between Britain and the US.
    Interesting video. Back in the 1960s, when I bought my first watch, a Submariner cost around $250 in the US, but a lot of servicemen bought them for quite a bit less in Japan and Hong Kong.

    • @geographyinaction7814
      @geographyinaction7814 5 місяців тому

      I have never heard the term sumarine-ers.
      The term is sub- mariner, below the water, as opposed to a mariner, above water.

  • @_cru8368
    @_cru8368 4 роки тому

    May not rise to level of these watches, but consider Unimatic U2-B, and then Unimatic U2-C, in that order, to be on any military watch list.

  • @grahamthebaronhesketh.
    @grahamthebaronhesketh. 2 роки тому

    Pilot watches need a bezel. I am a pilot and I use the bezel all the time. The problem with the Rolex you feature is the have lines instead of numbers.

  • @enricoadriatico7244
    @enricoadriatico7244 4 роки тому

    what was the music playing in the intro?

  • @McLaughter_
    @McLaughter_ 3 роки тому

    Incorrect regrading the BP FF which was in existence before the French navy started searching for a suitable diver

  • @ventus5th
    @ventus5th 4 роки тому

    As much as I like the content: Would anyone know what the intro song is?

  • @amitfromisrael5006
    @amitfromisrael5006 5 років тому

    what is the difference between "military" and "pilots" watches?

  • @boxwoodgreen
    @boxwoodgreen 3 роки тому

    Does anybody make a homage watch of the WW2 WWW watch ?

  • @georgiivanov2111
    @georgiivanov2111 5 років тому

    what about Hamilton khaki field.

  • @mikerogers879
    @mikerogers879 3 роки тому

    No mention of the A-11 aptly named “the watch that won the war” from WW2? Literally the most popular watch worn by the allied forces...

  • @mr.Swartz
    @mr.Swartz 5 років тому

    Sangin should be up top

  • @TheMockTrail
    @TheMockTrail 5 років тому +3

    No Russian: Vostok (since the 1930s) dive watches with their ingenious pressure-resistant system? No Chinese (since the the mid-1950s) pilot watches with it's adaption of Venus movements? And no Hamiltons......?

  • @andres-gu8yu
    @andres-gu8yu 3 роки тому +1

    come on man, no A-11 watches??? u joking?

  • @EranBuhbut
    @EranBuhbut 4 роки тому

    7:10 *Luminor.
    Please double check. Great vid nevertheless.

  • @donutheist
    @donutheist 4 місяці тому

    Oh give me a break. The A-11 is far more iconic than the milsub. Good lord.

  • @ambindia
    @ambindia 4 роки тому

    Switzerland being landlocked and surrounded on all sides by Germany and its allies or German occupied territories, how did these watches reach the British armed forces?

    • @ArmandTheWatchGuy
      @ArmandTheWatchGuy  4 роки тому

      +ambindia: That's a fascinating question. Unfortunately, it's one which I am unqualified to answer yet, to the best of my knowledge, they had to work their way across the Iberian peninsula to Portugal or Gibraltar before getting to Britain. it should also be remembered that some of the 12 'Dirty Dozen' watches never actually made it to British troops during the war and were delivered in 1945.

    • @ambindia
      @ambindia 4 роки тому

      @@ArmandTheWatchGuy That was the only explanation I too came up with, when my brother posed the question to me.Of course, watches are not bulky cargo so sending them across Iberia[but do recall that occupied France was in the middle,might not have posed much problem. Through Italy and then by sea could be another way.With cooperation of course!

    • @ambindia
      @ambindia 4 роки тому

      Did Swiss neutrality allow non lethal cargoes to move?

    • @ArmandTheWatchGuy
      @ArmandTheWatchGuy  4 роки тому

      @@ambindia To the best of my knowledge, Swiss neutrality had no effect whatsoever. However, whilst I don't believe that Italy played a role in the transportation of these watches, they did play an interesting other one. When Panerai produced the (only) ~300 watches for the Italian navy, most of them ended up being used by Italian-trained German military divers.

  • @Shawncombat
    @Shawncombat 4 роки тому

    75million people died in ww2, 40 million in ww1

  • @MLKusername
    @MLKusername Рік тому

    What happened to the channel 😢

  • @specialized41
    @specialized41 5 років тому

    36 minute to talk about 7 watches??

  • @TheGreatAmphibian
    @TheGreatAmphibian 3 місяці тому

    In reality, this is utter nonsense. The greatest military watches were the 5 button G shock and the f91w. You’re just jewellery collecting while trying to con yourself into thinking it’s Manly…

  • @justinyap3370
    @justinyap3370 5 років тому +1

    seriously your video is too long