SIHH 2014: Royal Oak Offshore Diver

SIHH 2014: Royal Oak Offshore Diver

Not only is there the pre-launched Royal Oak Concept GMT Tourbillon with titanium case middle and white-ceramic bezel, pushers, crown and movement bridge (see ‘Savoir-Faire’ press kit), but the Manufacture is also expanding its formidable Royal Oak Offshore Diver collection with a dazzling specimen, positively glowing white with the ultra-hard composite material, even from the depths of the ocean.

It perfectly complements the Royal Oak Offshore Diver range, which is water-resistant to 300m and protected by an anti-magnetic inner case. The model’s distinctive case-back screws, intermediate bolts and hexagonal screws secure the case as securely as a submarine hatch. The Diver is equipped with a time pre-selection device (NIHS 92-11 norm) and otherwise available in steel or in an even more sophisticated black on black ceramic version. 

This year’s use of white Super Ceramics means the new Diver’s bezel, case middle, pushers and crown are 40% more resistant to scratches than if black ceramic had been used (1850 Vickers vs. 1300 Vickers hardness). In fact, white ceramics are 9 times harder than steel, meaning the manufacture of these components is a particularly complex and lengthy process. 

For example, it takes around 12 hours to make the case middle, compared with 1 . hours if it were in steel; 8 hours to make the bezel, compared with 45 minutes if it were in steel. The upshot is that the new Royal Oak Offshore Diver is almost totally scratchproof, meaning in turn that the octagonal bezel’s trademark satin-brushing and polishing finishes are particularly difficult! 

The inner bezel is rotated by a unidirectional ratcheted mechanism linked to a crown at 10 o’clock. This mechanism reinforces the technical nature of the model while preserving the legendary aesthetic of the octagon. Once the crown is screwed in again, there is no risk of inadvertently modifying the dive time. The case protects the internal rotation mechanism from any form of external aggression.