Skip to content

TUDOR
Black Bay P01
black dial 42 mm

TUDOR
Black Bay P01
black dial 42 mm

4510 

1 in stock

Description

Black Bay P01 42 mm

The Black Bay P01 42 mm watch has many features that make it charming and unique.

Reference : m70150-0001

Five-year warranty : This model has a transferable five-year warranty, with no registration or intermediate checks required.

The story of the Black Bay collection

collection Black Bay 's iconic Tudor Submariner , 1954 according. The first in a long line of dive watches, ergonomic, legible, precise and robust, it perfectly embodied the approach formulated by American architect Louis Sullivan, to which the form of an object should follow its function. It also laid the aesthetic and technical foundations of an ideal dive watch: a simple, functional , and reliable.

This collection currently includes more than a dozen variations. Some pay homage to legendary watches of the past, while others reinvent the archetype in a completely new way.

Tudor timepieces iconic, affordable, driven by a remarkable design. It features the winding crown of the famous reference 7924 from 1958, aka the Big Crown, while its characteristic angular hands, known as " Snowflake ", were borrowed from the TUDOR used by the French Navy in the 1970s.

This model is available in different versions:

The model currently on screen: Black Bay P01 42 mm

Additional information

Collection

Black Bay

Movement

Self-winding mechanical movement with bidirectional rotor system. Manufacture Calibre MT5612 (COSC).

Power reserve

Power reserve of approximately 70 hours.

Size

42

Telescope

Bidirectional rotating bezel with 60 notches in steel, graduated over 12 hours with a system for stopping the bidirectional rotating bezel by a movable lug cover at 12 o'clock.

Housing

The case is made of 42mm steel with a satin finish.

Winding crown

Screw-on steel crown at 4 o'clock, adorned with the embossed TUDOR logo.

Dial color

Black

Bracelet

Leather

Waterproofing

This model guarantees watertightness at extreme pressures, up to 200 m.