This eventually led me to acquiring a Radiomir in 42mm, the 338: and a Submersible in 42mm, the 973: Both of those work much better, in my opinion, than any 40mm Panerai. The proportions just aren't right on the 40s. I enjoyed the Submersible thoroughly f
A lot of charm the early series, a 24C seen today vs my 25H. Nothing much to say, the pics do the talkin'! At roughly twice the price of a luminova 24 and 25, a bit of a hard sell but a lot of tritium for the money if funds were available. The 25 dial is
Nothing fancy, just a decent dive watch which can take a beating. The bezel action could be tighter and they could have done without a cyclops, these are minor gripes that don't get in the way of wearing pleasure.
the Egiziano the "diving" tag comes with it. At that time, the dives were "down and up" and at depths that didn't require..safety stops or decompression stops (if they did they were serious stuff). At the time the 024A came out they....exsisted A multilev
when things were still on the...up and up...the Swiss were producing 001-002-004-006-007-008-009 (that would be 1998-2001,some T-dialled, some L-dialled) and the most massively produced models in Panerai' history (I think) 024-025 and the 40mm, automatic