Okay, first up is a Charles Gigandet triple-date chrono, with the AOPA (Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association) wings. From what I can tell this was a precursor to the Breitling Navitimer, but I've never seen another one.
Next up is one of Harold's Seiko mods.
Let's see, who's next? How about a Doxa SUB 300 "no T"? This is from the first year of production before they went to the flat crystals. This is the Sharkhunter with the black dial, and rare USD outline logo.
Next up is another Doxa, this is the rare "Black Lung", one of ~10 made.
Now is the only watch I own with a flat crystal, this is a very early, very rare Sector Diving Team 1000 from the earliest run. It's got the machined bezel and other goodies, not the boring cast parts. Chunky meets funky.
Here's the one that gets the most wrist time, it's 95% gen but not quite there, wish it was.
My grandfather's watch. He was the head Ranger in Yellowstone Park for decades and wore this one.
Now we get down and dirty. Here's the 1680 Submariner that's seen some hard use. "Love it to death", they say.
This one has been cared for a little better. It's all original from 1964, my AD buddy added this tropical gilt dial last year, I've added a small-arrow GMT hand in the last few months.
Here's my birth-year watch. It saw rough duty, being issued to a Spec-Ops diver and when he passed on his widow gave it to me. Over the last 20 years I've been putting it back to original spec.
This one spent its life at the bottom of the seven seas. It's been everywhere and done everything. Literally. When its owner tore his foot off his diving days were over, and it became mine. I received this one from his widow, but I'd rather have him back again. I've spent several years putting this one back to all-original spec too.