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Seiko Scuba Titanium 5M43-0B70 "The Grey Ghost" (Sold)

€ 395.00

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About Details and then some
Manufacture Seiko Scuba
Model reference SBBW049 5M43-0B70
Movement Kinetic
Caliber 5M43
Dial Grey Starlight
Case 43x46x13mm Titanium
Lugs 19mm
Bracelet Titanium D0S0DM 19,5cm
Crystal serial # 280WA0HB01 Hardlex
Timegrapher Accuracy:+tbe
Jewels 9
Serial # 82xxxx Production: 1998-02
Condition Mint
Service New battery
Box & Papers None None

This scuba diver is a Seiko Kinetic anti-allergic full titanium 200m diver's watch with tri-fold double push button clasp. Lumibrite indices behind a domed Hardlex glass with internal non reflective coating. Gorgeous Starlight grey dial!

The Seiko AGS (automatic generating system), introduced in Germany in January 1988, was the world's first quartz watch to be equipped with an automatic power generating system. An ultra-compact power generator was built in, so the AGS had no battery that needed replacing. Introduced at a time when global ecological issues were in the public eye, the AGS was spotlighted as a groundbreaking watch that would launch a new era of quartz timepieces.

Quartz watches employed drive systems that relied on battery power- and batteries require periodic replacement. This reliance on batteries was an issue from the start of quartz watch development, as there were concerns about issues such as the watches' practicability in regions where batteries would be difficult to obtain and the disposal of used batteries. Since the advent of the quartz watch, Epson had been casting about for and researching a variety of drive systems as it labored to develop a product that would overcome these obstacles. During this effort the company put much of its weight behind developing a watch with an automatic power generating system, one that would merge an automatic-winding drive system with the accuracy of a quartz system. A full-blown development effort that got under way in 1983 culminated in the successful development of the world's first automatic power-generating watch, a timepiece with timekeeping circuits driven by power generated by the movement of the wearer's arm.

The AGS that came out of this effort won wide acclaim in the United States and Europe, where interest in global environmental conservation was especially high. In April 1988 the watch went on sale in Japan under the name Seiko Auto-Quartz. In 1997 the name of the mechanism was for most models changed from AGS to Kinetic (not this one) to emphasize the convenience of a mechanism that uses the natural movement of the wearer's arm to generate power. Under either name, the AGS mechanism became one of the main models of Seiko wristwatches and is used in a great many different watch products. And it's not only used in watches. This automatic power-generating system has also been used in a diverse range of other applications.