This Seastar Navigator Chronograph captures that era’s confidence in full color. Housed in a 40mm stainless steel cushion case, it has the kind of wrist presence that feels entirely modern today — broad, sporty, and purposeful without veering into excess. Finding a true 40mm chronograph from the early ’70s in this kind of condition? Easier said than done.
Thesilver dial is where things get interesting. Twin registers anchor the layout — running seconds at 9 o’clock and a 30-minute counterat 3 — while a square date aperture at 6 keeps the symmetry satisfyingly intact. But it’s the accents that make this piece sing: vivid orange and red chronograph hands paired with a light blue demarcation for the first five minutes of the 30-minute counter. It’splayful, legible, and unmistakably period-correct.
Inside beats the manually wound Valjoux 7734 — a workhorse chronograph caliber known for reliability and ease of service. The pushers engage with confidence; thereset snaps back crisply. Exactly what you want.
Complete with its original steelbracelet, signed clasp, acrylic crystal, and an honest tool-watch feel, this is vintage Tissot at its most compelling.
Color, character, and a price that still makes sense — the kind of chronograph that reminds you why our ’70s watches are always in demand.