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EDC

The Citizen Promaster Dive: Built Like a Bunker, Priced Like a Bivouac

March 12, 2025 by Ajita Sherer Leave a Comment

If you spend any time in the field, under the waves, or just want a watch that’s not going to tap out after a hard day’s work, I humbly suggest the Citizen Promaster Dive. This thing is built like a Cold War bomb shelter, over-engineered, tough as nails, and ready to survive anything short of a direct hit. I’ve personally worn mine while free-diving in Hawaii, hammering through daily life, multiple range trips, and just generally running it through the kind of abuse I would never subject a similarly beautiful timepiece to. It hasn’t let me down yet.

Let’s get the basics out of the way: stainless steel case, screw-down crown, and ISO-certified for real diving duty, not just “check out my waterproof watch in the neighbors pool”. With water resistance at 200 meters, you can be clearing a beachhead, hunting for lobsters, or just flexing on the gym-bro with the “fashion dive watch” that would, and will, flood at the first sign of rain.

MOVEMENT: SOLAR POWERED RELIABILITY

The Eco-Drive movement is pure, delicious, puts-the-lotion-on-its-skin efficiency. No batteries, no winding, just light-powered longevity, and it’s proven too, with Citizen releasing their first eco-drive model in 1976, after a successful prototype in ’74. Whether you’re baking on the deck of your pleasure yacht, under fluorescent lights, or leading a tactical column down a dark alley with a sub-gun (for legal reasons, this is a joke), the watch keeps charging. You could throw this thing in a drawer for six months, pick it up, and it’ll still be ticking. That’s the kind of no-BS dependability you want in a watch, especially when real-world conditions don’t give you time to mess with charging cables or winding crowns.

DURABILITY: BECAUSE LIFE IS FULL-CONTACT

Let’s talk about construction – this ain’t some delicate piece of Swiss jewelry. The mineral crystal glass shrugs off scratches better than an E4 skating out of work, and the stainless steel case is about as damage resistant as it gets without being classified as body armor. I’ve banged mine up against rocks, steel, coral, and God knows what else, and it still looks like it just came out of the dive tank box.

The blue polyurethane strap is built for the mission. This is a dive watch, so it’s waterproof, comfortable, and tough. My only complaint is for the first few wears, it can feel a little stiff as it adjusts to your wrist. Yes, it isn’t leather, but if you’re looking for a watch to toss in a display case and match the seats on your Rolls, you’re reading the wrong review.

AESTHETICS: FUNCTIONAL BUT ATTRACTIVE

This watch isn’t just full of features and function, it also looks damn good. My personal selection has the “Pepsi” bezel, featuring a blue dial, with red, white, and blue accents. (Is my patriotism showing yet?) That being said, it gives off perfect maritime vibes, without looking like a Fourth of July parade on your wrist. The luminous hands and markers mean you’ll still be able to read the time in the pitch dark, whether that’s underwater, in a blackout, or in mom’s fully furnished basement playing Warzone.

 

The author’s Promaster on his tiny wrist

THE PRICE: LAUGHING IN THE FACE OF ROYALTY

Here’s where the Promaster Dive really shines. *Drum roll please* It can be had for under $500. You read that right, at the time of this writing, the above model is on sale for $300 on Citizen’s website, which is actually about $85 less than I paid for mine. That price is absolutely lightyears away from certain other luxury dive watches, (cough, Rolex Submariner, cough) which will have you handing over $10,000 or more for “heritage” and “prestige.” And look, I get it, a Rolex is a Rolex, and I respect that, but even other mainstream brands will charge you WELL over $1,000 for something with similar specs. But this Citizen? It does the job, takes the beating, and keeps on ticking, without draining your bank account.

FINAL VERDICT: BUY IT, WEAR IT, FORGET IT

If you need a watch that can keep up with real-world action, whether that’s diving, training, or surviving that upcoming HR meeting with that random guy named Alexei that keeps stealing your sandwich, the Citizen Promaster Dive is the no-nonsense, bulletproof timepiece you’ve been looking for. No charging, no pampering, no babying, just reliable timekeeping in a package that is tough enough to outlast you, and probably will. For the price of DoorDashing your meals for two weeks (please don’t ask me how I know this, it’s called shame), you can get a watch that will last YEARS, and handle just about anything you throw at it. If that’s not tactical efficiency, I don’t know what is.

 

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About the Author

Ajita Sherer Ajita Sherer spent eight years on active duty in the U.S. Air Force and currently serves as an employee of the DoD, dedicating his career to Combat Rescue. As an engine troop and later a Flying Crew Chief on CSAR C-130Js, he deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in support of SOF missions, often serving as the sole mechanic on aircraft deep in contested environments. Working closely with Air Force Pararescue (PJs), JTACs, and Combat Controllers, as well as Navy SEALs, Army Rangers, and our sister country's Tier 1 units, he provided direct support to some of the military’s most demanding rescue and combat operations. He is most proud of his role in real-world rescue missions in Operation Inherent Resolve, saving lives and delivering trauma care to SOF teams and Marine Task Force Lion. Now an Aerospace Propulsion curriculum developer, Sherer is solely responsible for developing curriculum and training the next generation of engine system maintainers on more than 70% of all Air Force aircraft, to include his former CSAR platforms.

See All Ajita Sherer Articles

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