
Marathon 'CSAR' Automatic Chronograph Jumbo 46mm
Here, we have a robust Marathon 'CSAR' Automatic Chronograph Jumbo 46mm, known as Chronograph Search and Rescue (CSAR). First introduced in the 1990s, it was developed and specified by the Canadian Government for special Search and Rescue operations. A brushed 46mm stainless steel case curves over your wrist thanks to tapered drilled lugs, and a lug-to-lug length of 55mm and a case thickness of 17.5mm give the watch an impressive wrist presence. Down the right side we have the screw-down chronograph pushers with cross-hatch knurling and a large screw-down crown with cross-hatch knurling for grip protected by crown guards. The unidirectional 120-click bezel has thick knurling for ease of grip when wearing gloves and a black 60-minute dive insert holding a flat sapphire crystal AR coated above a matte black dial. An outer 1/100 of a minute Decimal scale is precisely executed surrounding applied Tritium Gas Tubes and MaraGlo baton indexes above large 12-hour Arabic numerals and smaller 24-hour numerals marking the hours; at 3 o’clock, we have a day/date window, at 12 o’clock a 30-minute register, at 6 o’clock a 12-hour register and finally at 9 o’clock a small seconds register. Thick syringe hands have Tritium Gas Tubes and MaraGlo for a distinctive green glow complemented by a tapered red arrow-tipped chronograph hand. We have the Marathon motif with H3 and the radioactive symbol. In 1973, the H3 and Radiation symbol was added to US military specification requirements; the H3 stands for radioactive Tritium, which gives that exceptionally long-lasting bright lume. On the reverse, a screw-down solid case back with the details of the watch around its edge and the Government specification ID numbers engraved for the following: ISO 6425, 26 MILLICURIES is the amount of Radioactive material in the watch, NRC ID- Nuclear Regulatory Commission ID number for Tritium, next is the General Services Administration contract number with the ID number for suppliers to government agencies, inside an Automatic ETA/Valjoux 7750, 25 jewels, beating at 28,800 beats per hour, this workhorse chronograph movement has quick-set date, hacking seconds and hand winding for your convenience. It comes paired with its 22mm brushed stainless steel 3-link bracelet secured by a signed deployant clasp and flip lock engraved with the Canadian Forces tri-service logo. All links and an additional 22mm NATO strap are provided, and the watch comes with this Marathon presentation box, spare bezel and paperwork.
Here, we have a robust Marathon 'CSAR' Automatic Chronograph Jumbo 46mm, known as Chronograph Search and Rescue (CSAR). First introduced in the 1990s, it was developed and specified by the Canadian Government for special Search and Rescue operations. A brushed 46mm stainless steel case curves over your wrist thanks to tapered drilled lugs, and a lug-to-lug length of 55mm and a case thickness of 17.5mm give the watch an impressive wrist presence. Down the right side we have the screw-down chronograph pushers with cross-hatch knurling and a large screw-down crown with cross-hatch knurling for grip protected by crown guards. The unidirectional 120-click bezel has thick knurling for ease of grip when wearing gloves and a black 60-minute dive insert holding a flat sapphire crystal AR coated above a matte black dial. An outer 1/100 of a minute Decimal scale is precisely executed surrounding applied Tritium Gas Tubes and MaraGlo baton indexes above large 12-hour Arabic numerals and smaller 24-hour numerals marking the hours; at 3 o’clock, we have a day/date window, at 12 o’clock a 30-minute register, at 6 o’clock a 12-hour register and finally at 9 o’clock a small seconds register. Thick syringe hands have Tritium Gas Tubes and MaraGlo for a distinctive green glow complemented by a tapered red arrow-tipped chronograph hand. We have the Marathon motif with H3 and the radioactive symbol. In 1973, the H3 and Radiation symbol was added to US military specification requirements; the H3 stands for radioactive Tritium, which gives that exceptionally long-lasting bright lume. On the reverse, a screw-down solid case back with the details of the watch around its edge and the Government specification ID numbers engraved for the following: ISO 6425, 26 MILLICURIES is the amount of Radioactive material in the watch, NRC ID- Nuclear Regulatory Commission ID number for Tritium, next is the General Services Administration contract number with the ID number for suppliers to government agencies, inside an Automatic ETA/Valjoux 7750, 25 jewels, beating at 28,800 beats per hour, this workhorse chronograph movement has quick-set date, hacking seconds and hand winding for your convenience. It comes paired with its 22mm brushed stainless steel 3-link bracelet secured by a signed deployant clasp and flip lock engraved with the Canadian Forces tri-service logo. All links and an additional 22mm NATO strap are provided, and the watch comes with this Marathon presentation box, spare bezel and paperwork.
Original: $3,016.26
-65%$3,016.26
$1,055.69Description
Here, we have a robust Marathon 'CSAR' Automatic Chronograph Jumbo 46mm, known as Chronograph Search and Rescue (CSAR). First introduced in the 1990s, it was developed and specified by the Canadian Government for special Search and Rescue operations. A brushed 46mm stainless steel case curves over your wrist thanks to tapered drilled lugs, and a lug-to-lug length of 55mm and a case thickness of 17.5mm give the watch an impressive wrist presence. Down the right side we have the screw-down chronograph pushers with cross-hatch knurling and a large screw-down crown with cross-hatch knurling for grip protected by crown guards. The unidirectional 120-click bezel has thick knurling for ease of grip when wearing gloves and a black 60-minute dive insert holding a flat sapphire crystal AR coated above a matte black dial. An outer 1/100 of a minute Decimal scale is precisely executed surrounding applied Tritium Gas Tubes and MaraGlo baton indexes above large 12-hour Arabic numerals and smaller 24-hour numerals marking the hours; at 3 o’clock, we have a day/date window, at 12 o’clock a 30-minute register, at 6 o’clock a 12-hour register and finally at 9 o’clock a small seconds register. Thick syringe hands have Tritium Gas Tubes and MaraGlo for a distinctive green glow complemented by a tapered red arrow-tipped chronograph hand. We have the Marathon motif with H3 and the radioactive symbol. In 1973, the H3 and Radiation symbol was added to US military specification requirements; the H3 stands for radioactive Tritium, which gives that exceptionally long-lasting bright lume. On the reverse, a screw-down solid case back with the details of the watch around its edge and the Government specification ID numbers engraved for the following: ISO 6425, 26 MILLICURIES is the amount of Radioactive material in the watch, NRC ID- Nuclear Regulatory Commission ID number for Tritium, next is the General Services Administration contract number with the ID number for suppliers to government agencies, inside an Automatic ETA/Valjoux 7750, 25 jewels, beating at 28,800 beats per hour, this workhorse chronograph movement has quick-set date, hacking seconds and hand winding for your convenience. It comes paired with its 22mm brushed stainless steel 3-link bracelet secured by a signed deployant clasp and flip lock engraved with the Canadian Forces tri-service logo. All links and an additional 22mm NATO strap are provided, and the watch comes with this Marathon presentation box, spare bezel and paperwork.























