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Orient Men's Japanese Automatic / Hand-Winding Stainless Steel 200 Meter Diving Watch

  • Based on 4,587 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: Only 2 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by 99watches

Arrives Jul 10 – Jul 12
Order within 22 hours and 16 minutes
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Color: Marine Blue


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4.72 x 4.72 x 4.72 inches; 6 ounces


Item model number ‏ : ‎ TAA02005D9


Department ‏ : ‎ mens


Batteries ‏ : ‎ 1 Product Specific batteries required.


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ April 18, 2016


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Orient


Brand, Seller, or Collection Name: Orient


Model number: TAA02005D9


Part Number: TAA02005D9


Model Year: 2019


Item Shape: Round


Dial window material type: Mineral


Display Type: Analog


Clasp: Push Button Foldover Clasp With Safety


Case material: Stainless Steel


Case diameter: 41 millimeters


Case Thickness: 13 millimeters


Band Material: Stainless Steel


Band size: Men's Standard


Band width: 22 millimeters


Band Color: Silver


Dial color: Blue


Bezel material: Stainless Steel


Bezel function: Diving


Calendar: Day-Date


Special features: Automatic Self Wind, Hacking Movement


Item weight: 6 ounces


Movement: Automatic / Hand-Winding


Water resistant depth: 660 Feet


Warranty: User manual Manual [PDF ]


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jul 10 – Jul 12

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Best Overall Non-Pro Diver In $100-$500 Price Range
Color: Black
I'll get this out of the way first: The Orient Ray (Black) is my daily-wear watch, and I love it. I say it's in the Non-Pro category only because, for a number of reasons, including water resistance rating of 20ATM (200 Meters) it is not suitable for deep diving. Now, let me tell you why I love it, giving you the high points and low points. ***Important: My evaluation is based on my personal preferences in watch styling and mechanics. The only hard & fast rule in watch preferences is that there ARE NO hard & fast rules in watch preferences, so take my points in that context. If you see watches in the same way I do, you may find them helpful. 1. Dive Styling: 41.5" case size turns out to be my sweet spot, and the black bezel with larger marked 10 second increments is clear, easy to read. The face is black, and it's a DEEP DARK BLACK, as is the bezel, contrasting well with the hour markings. The hour & minute hands are modified "sword styling", the second hand a long, slim pointer tipped with a bright red spear. It's a little thing, but the detail finish on all three hands is the quality of a much more expensive timepiece. All three are lumed, and it's a bright, long lasting lume - I can easily read mine in the dark after eight hours of sleep. Ditto on the hour markers and bezel pip. Which brings me to a personal preference - the Ray's hour markers are either round or rectangular, with a slightly larger wedge shape at "12" position - no "numbers". I believe this gives a dive watch a much cleaner look, but some folks like to see some numbers - if you do, consider the Orient Mako, with numerals at 6,9 & 12. Personal preference. 2. Case: Orient makes a heavy-feeling SS case w/screw-down back. It feels solid, and supports the 200M depth rating, and I'm guessing might actually rate considerably higher. Top surfaces are finely brushed, with side surfaces polished, for a subtly expensive look. Crown is screw-down, as a dive watch should be, with grip a little on the hard to grasp side, but still acceptable. Crown is polished, with the Orient logo embossed on the end, a classy touch. Action is firm when adjusting hands & day/date. Threads engage firmly, with an appropriately sized thread tube that does not "wobble" when the crown is grasped. The Ray has built-in crown guards formed as part of the case - I find this one it's most attractive cosmetic features, and of course it makes perfect sense to protect the crown. Crystal is "mineral"...I would have paid more to get the same watch with a Sapphire crystal, but understand the cost/benefit calculation. Having said that, I've been wearing Orients with mineral crystals for about five years now, with no scratches, and I'm a clumsy oaf with my watches, so it must be a pretty hard surface. 3. Bezel: As mentioned, bezel on this model is a deep, inky black, with minute numerals crisply rendered in a SS tone. The Ray's bezel is a 120 click version. Here is one if my two criticisms - the action on this bezel, like the older model Ray & Mako's I've owned, is really too tight for diving use - there is no possible way it could be turned under water with or without gloves, because the "teeth" around the circumference are too small & smooth considering the tight action. This actually works well if worn as I do, in a "desk diving" mode, where bumps do not dislodge it, but not underwater, if that is a consideration. 4. Movement: The new Ray features a hacking house-built Orient beating automatic heart, #F6922. My previous Orients used the older, Non-Hacking movement, which is one of the key reasons I fell in love with Orient Automatics. The older movement ran just a bit slow for me, but more importantly was ALWAYS very CONSISTENT, with a very quiet winding pendulum. The new movement seems already to be just as high quality - and my particular F6922 is running consistently about 10-12 seconds fast per day, which I consider perfect for an automatic. No guarantee yours will do the same, but believe me, this movement is the equal of far more expensive engines. The Day/Date function is crisp & seats perfectly in the viewing windows. Thank GOD Orient has ditched the "Day" Pusher located at 2 o'Clock on the old Ray case, with the arrival of the new movement. It was ugly, cheap looking, and another way for the watch to leak (I put up with it because I loved the rest of the watch so much). Another small Orient detail - the silver Day/Date window "frame" is beautifully finished & perfectly seated. The second hand sweep is not as buttery smooth as a 28K or Hi-Beat movement would be, but perfectly acceptable, and the red tip gives that little extra "instrument panel" look to the overall analog face. While we're talking movements, personal preference #2 - Automatic movements are my requirement vs Quartz...I've owned lots of both, don't own any Quartz's now. There are great Quartz divers out there - the Seiko Tuna monoblock titanium Quartz was one of my first "crushes", but I'm strictly an Auto guy now. 5. Bracelet/Band: I removed the bracelet as soon as I unboxed the watch, and placed the watch on a black 22mm ballistic nylon 2-Pc. Strap. This is one of those personal preference deals - I like a light wearing watch/strap combo - and you may prefer a bracelet, no problem. It's an OK bracelet, medium weight class for a SS bracelet, although a ratcheting dive clasp replacing the deployant clasp would be cool. My least favorite features are the non-solid end link covers - they are the usual flimsy covers, and in my opinion have no place on a timepiece purporting to aspire to the name "Dive Watch". I left the plastic & paper wraps on mine, and will be selling it. If I ever want a bracelet for this watch, I'll go aftermarket, possibly the solid end-link model w/ ratcheting dive extension used on Orient's own Saturation Diver, which also has a 22mm Lug width. 6. Overall, I'm in love. My watch collection is down to two - this and a Deep Blue Pro-Aqua Auto, for those days I feel like wearing a brick on my wrist. If one dive watch is all you want to worry about, and you don't dive for a living, some color version of the Orient Ray will make you a very happy Desk Diver. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2017 by Charlie Van Pelt Charlie Van Pelt

  • Great watch, amazing at its price point, room for some improvement
Color: Marine Blue
4 and a half stars if it were an option This is an aweaome timepiece, looks good and makos(and of course rays) keep great time once they've settled in I personally have 3 beefs with these watches. First, the crown on the new makos and rays is definatly too small. Hard to grip and a pain in the neck to screw in becuase its so small. Not a deal breaker, but should certainly be addressed when (if?) They ever decide to come out with a mako/ray 3. Second, the bezel on these watches looks great, and I dont mind that they're a bit stiff, I actually kind of prefer that, as it won't accidentally move. However, because the watch crystal isn't sapphire, I think the bezel should be tall enough to create a buffer for the crystal, 2 or 3 mm taller and it would greatly reduce thw chance of scratching the glass. Third, I know they make a 'usa' version that addresses this, but. The watch braclet and the crystal. The end links on the braclet alone could be so much better, presumably for not too great a cost to orient. I'd gladly pay an extra.. Say 10 or 20 bucks to have that improvement. The same applies to the crystal. Call that 30. Really amazing at 150-170 bucks, could be mind boggling at 200 -230. The lume isn't amazing either, but the ray has chunky hands amd indices, making that not really even a problem. I own several makos, and this is my first ray. My work watch for the last few years was a black dial mako(original) on a leather cuff/band. I still runs great but the crystal is scuffed to the point I allmost want to buy a crystal press and attemt a repair The ray (in blue) is now my work watch, and I'm gonna try to remeber to take it off if I get into anything particularly rough going forward Don't take me wrong though, I would highly recomend this watch, it's pretty, it's low cost, and remarkably well built, especially for the price. It can dress up or down well enough for 95% of most peoples day to day lives. I just see that a few details can be improved upon, and in my mind, the first 2 alone would make this watch the last I would want to own. Last thing, why doesn't Amazon carry the USA Version? ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2018 by V V

  • Great Watch at an Awesome price!
Color: Marine Blue
For the price, I think this is a great watch. It has a beautiful blue dial and has been accurate in keeping time. I usually only have been wearing it on weekends in the few weeks I've had it and it's kept the time accurately. I had it sized for my 6.5" wrist. Honestly, at 41.5 mm and 13 mm high this is a big as I should go for a watch. It's a little tall on mu wrist, but it does look good IMO, but I would not go bigger. I'm now looking for 2nd diver (Omega Seamaster) at 41 mm which I hope will be my sweet spot. The instruction manual was a bit confusing in the instructions on how to wind the watch, but I figured it out watching a YouTube vid: You have to unwind the crown until it completely disengages and then turn it clockwise for about 30 turns, that's it. It has hacking and hand-winding features that its closest Seiko competitor does not have. I was worried that it would be difficult to rotate the bezel: it's tight but not as impossible as I've seen others state on Youtube. It's actually loosened up a little bit for me and that's a good thing. Only criticism is that I wish it had 2 more micro adjustment slots in the bracelet. The bracelet is fine, not great. I don't dive, so I might put a leather or nato strap on it. If you can get it for <$160, buy it! I paid $150 at the time ... price does fluctuate from time to time. Good little watch. And of course, Amazon is amazing . . . I got it in 2 days with Prime. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2018 by Chris, Florida Chris, Florida

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