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A case number (A string of 4 and 6-figure numbers ie. Xxxx-xxxxxx or a string of 4 and 7 alphanumerics ie. Xxxx-xxxxxxx) is stamped on the case back of your watch. The first 4 characters of the case number is the movement number. Notes for the movement number: The location of the case number of each watch depends on the characteristics of that. Citizen automatic watch - 21 jewels - In good condition Men's Period: 1980s Measurements: 36 mm (excluding crown) x 40 mm Measurements: 38 mm with crown Height: 1 cm Steel bracelet - Measures 16 cm closed Bracelet width: 20 mm - 12 mm at the clasp Functions: Hours, minutes, seconds, day and date The days are in English and French. Water resistant Stainless Japanese movement Very good. Possibly Citizen’s first diver, using the 1120 ‘Jet’ movement in 21 jewel form (first produced in 1962) this 200 meter rated model was known as the ‘Skin Diver’. This is a very rare piece. It appears to have been made with black or silver dials and an external bezel – pale gold on the silver dialled version. You are bidding on a Citizen 21 jewels vintage watch. The rear of the watch face reads 'citizen watch co, water resist stainless, 4-r02149 ac 110581, gn-4w-s'In great condition but it could do with a professional clean, the clasp and dial are in perfect working order.The watch comes unboxed with no documentation.! Access the Setting Instruction Manual for your particular Citizen watch in one of two ways: 1. USING CALIBER NUMBER. Referencing the diagrams below, locate and enter the movement Caliber Number on your watch's caseback in the entry field on this page, then click or tap 'Get Instructions'.
It is my pleasure to introduce to you my three vintage Citizen 150m divers: 68-5372 , 62-6198, 52-0110.
Even though they might look similar at the very first sight, they are different models.
They are all in excellent condition, the first two are actually NOS, the third one is not, but really well kept. The first one is made in 1971, the second in 1974 and the third in 1978. Read about how to date a Citizen watch here: https://vintagecitizenwatches.com/2014/02/23/dating-a-vintage-citizen-watch/
Lets start with the similarities:
All three are divers, rated to a respectable depth of 150m water pressure. They share the same case (4-740131Y , 4-600851Y , 4-820789Y ), with the same screw-in large crown. The bezel is bidirectional friction type. The sides of the cases are polished and the frontal surfaces are brushed in a similar manner. They are 40mm wide with 20mm steel bracelets at the lugs. Thew share the same mineral crystal, concave on the inside, with a flat surface, that magnifies the beautiful black dials. The movements are automatics with 21 jewels. All three display the date at 3 o’clock and have a central sweeping hand with a luminous dot. The hour indexes are applied rectangles, large, and filled with luminous material. The hands are similar in shape (Mercedes type hour hand and spade minute hand). The three bracelets feature a diver extension link beneath the clasp. So, they are very much alike, but, let’t take a closer look!
The main difference is a small detail that I like a lot: The first one (made in 1971: 68-5372) is marked “parawater”. read more about parawater here: https://vintagecitizenwatches.com/2013/12/26/citizen-parawater-citizen-parashock/. All the other differences emerge, the way I see things, from this small detail (the date of manufacturing). The era of “parawater” was different. The first watch is the only one with a solid bracelet links, the others have folded links. The date window is better placed on the dial due to a different movement size on the ’71 watch. The hour hand and the minute hand are longer. The dot at the end of the second hand in similar to the first two models and I like this a lot. The bezels have different thickness, due to different crystal height. The thinest being the first one, getting thicker and thicker, translating to an overall watch height difference. The way the crystal fits to the case is very complicated at early models, with steel rings, rubber seals, and a lot of parts. The third one has the crystal fit by pressure ring plastic gasket. The way I see things Citizen tried to simplify production and make it mode profitable, but I like it complicated. Looking at the bezel inserts, the last one has markers on every minute. The middle one features an applied Citizen logo on the dial made from individual letters. The 1978 watch has a black digit date wheel. By contrast the other two have red digits. As a final touch, the printing on the dial is unique to every one of the three.
The casebacks are similar but with different markings. Removing the caseback we have the chance to see the movements. Three distinct movement, automatics, with 21 jewels. The most striking feature is the fact that the first watch movement is filling nicely the case, being a suited size (this is the reason for the date position on the dial). The later two have smaller movements. At least the middle one has a steel ring around it to fill the useless space. The latest one has a cheaper plastic ring. All three movements have quick date setting, and offer hand winding ability.
year model case no movement
1971 68-5372 4-740131Y 7470
1974 62-6198 4-600851Y 6000 (marked 6001)
1978 52-0110 4-820789Y 8210A
As a conclusion, I want to say that even though I admire the first one and really appreciate the second one, the third (the only one that is not NOS) is the one I love the most. Nevertheless, I will not disclose the reason why. 🙂 Having one vintage Citizen diver 150m is a joy, having three is a bless.
UPDATE – the second hand I have seen to be either lollipop style with the ball at the end of it or not. For any of these models. I have yet to find catalogue pictures to be 100% sure about it.
read more about vintage Citizen divers here: https://vintagecitizenwatches.com/diver-vcw/
Citizen Eagle SevenCitizen was originally founded as Shokosha Watch Research Institute in 1918. The trade name originated from a pocket watch it produced in 1924. The then Mayor of Tokyo, Mr Shimpei Goto, named the watch 'CITIZEN' with the hope that the watch, a luxury item of those days, would become widely available to ordinary citizens and be sold throughout the world. It is now one of the world's largest producers of watches.