Baltic · Aquascaphe
Aquascaphe
The Baltic Aquascaphe is a French microbrand diver drawing directly from 1960s skin-diver aesthetics, built around a compact 39mm stainless-steel case with 200m water resistance, a 120-click sapphire bezel insert, and a no-date Miyota 9039 automatic movement. Assembled in Besançon, France, it pairs a multi-layer sandwich dial with warm C1 Super-LumiNova in a package that retails well under $700.
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Water res.
Thick
Lug-to-lug
Overview
| Brand | Baltic |
| Collection | Aquascaphe |
| Category | Dive |
| Released | 2018 |
| Price guide | Mid-range · $600–900 |
Full specification
Specs
Case & dial
| Diameter | 39 mm |
| Lug-to-lug | 47 mm |
| Thickness | 13 mm |
| Lug width | 20 mm |
| Water resistance | 200 m |
| Crystal | double-dome sapphire with internal AR coating |
| Case material | stainless steel 316L |
| Bezel | 120-click unidirectional, sapphire insert |
| Case back | solid |
Movement & furniture
| Type | Automatic |
| Caliber | Miyota 9039 → |
| Power reserve | 42 h |
| Jewels | 24 |
| Lume | Super-LumiNova C1 |
| Strap / bracelet | rubber FKM strap or steel beads-of-rice bracelet |
Bottom line
A cult-worthy microbrand diver that earns its reputation through above-class vintage styling and build consistency at the price — the right call for compact-case enthusiasts who can live without a date hand.
Highlights
- 200m / 120-click sapphire bezel
- Vintage skin-diver silhouette
- Double-dome sapphire crystal
- No-date Miyota 9039, assembled France
- Multi-layer sandwich dial, C1 lume
Who it's for
Collectors drawn to 1960s dive-watch heritage who want a compact 39mm case (47mm L2L) that sits flush on a medium wrist without the bulk of modern sport watches; value-conscious buyers looking for sub-$700 sapphire crystal, 200m water resistance, and a dial with genuine visual character.
Who should skip it
Skip it if you need a date complication, prefer a Swiss lever escapement, or find beads-of-rice steel bracelets unappealing.
Before you buy
- Confirm the exact dial variant (Blue Gilt, Black Gilt, SB01, White) — lume colour and dial finish differ significantly across variants
- Several Classic SKUs (White, Black Cream, SB01) were discontinued April 2025; verify current availability before ordering
- The MK2 generation (launched October 2025) changes proportions to 37mm or 39.5mm — ensure you are ordering the correct generation
- Official thickness is 13mm including the double-dome crystal; many reviews cite 12mm, which is the case-only height without glass
FAQ
Is the Aquascaphe automatic or quartz?
It runs a automatic movement.
What movement does the Aquascaphe use?
The Miyota 9039 (Miyota).
Does the Aquascaphe have a date?
No.
How water resistant is the Aquascaphe?
It is rated to 200 m.
How big does the Aquascaphe wear?
39 mm wide with a 47 mm lug-to-lug.
How does the Aquascaphe compare to the Seiko Prospex skx range?
The Aquascaphe is smaller (39mm vs. 42–45mm on most Prospex divers), comes with sapphire crystal as standard where Seiko typically uses hardlex on entry models, and deliberately omits a date — a stylistic choice Baltic considers part of the clean dial design. The Miyota 9039 runs at a slightly higher beat rate and skews more accurate than the NH35A, but neither is COSC-certified.
Is the bezel insert sapphire or ceramic?
The Aquascaphe Classic uses a sapphire crystal bezel insert, which gives a characteristic soft, slightly translucent lustre reminiscent of vintage Bakelite. Baltic's Titanium variant uses a ceramic insert instead.
What changed with the MK2 update in late 2025?
The MK2 added a new 37mm size alongside a slightly enlarged 39.5mm option, replaced the C1 sandwich dial with thicker 3D lumicast appliqués using BGW9 lume, and reduced overall thickness to 12.9mm. The Classic generation (Blue Gilt and Black Gilt) remained available in parallel for some time but the MK2 is Baltic's current flagship Aquascaphe.
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