The full collector review — case analysis, movement details, finishing grade, market positioning, and sourcing reference — is below. Each section is worth reading for this reference.
A review of the Omega Seamaster Aqua Terra 150M Co-Axial Master Chro that is useful to a serious buyer needs to go beyond the specification sheet — the spec is the same across every example of this reference, but the execution quality varies considerably. This breakdown focuses on what distinguishes a good example from an average one.
The 41mm case is built in stainless steel, following the original reference geometry across lug width, case band, and crown placement without the dimensional shortcuts that lower-tier production accepts. At 13mm thick it sits comfortably under a shirt cuff without the case-band gap that bulkier builds create.
The ceramic bezel holds its colour and surface finish under UV exposure and daily contact wear in a way that metal bezels cannot match over time. The material also resists the casual impact marks that accumulate on polished metal bezels in regular use — making this a better practical choice for a daily wear piece than the equivalent metal execution.
The running well, finishing dialled in. We s has been regulated across the standard wearing positions — face up, crown down, and pendant — rather than only in the factory demonstration position. This regulation standard is what determines whether a superclone performs consistently through months of regular wear or only impresses in the first week.
The 150m water resistance rating covers swimming and regular daily exposure to water without concern — the screw-down crown and case back construction hold the seal to that depth under standard daily wear conditions.
The rubber strap provides the flexibility and water resistance compatibility that suits the active daily wear context this reference is designed for — it does not resist the wrist curve the way stiffer straps do, and the deployant clasp holds reliably through the full range of wrist movement.
Collectors comparing the titanium and steel variants of this reference will find the weight difference notable on the wrist — titanium wears approximately 30% lighter, which affects the daily wear character considerably.
Who This Reference Suits
This piece is built for the buyer who has already made their decision about this reference and is looking for confirmation that a specific example is worth acquiring. The build quality notes above should provide that confirmation — this is a well-sourced example of a reference that consistently attracts the right kind of collector attention.
Market Context
Higher-grade sourced examples of this reference generally circulate in the $726–926 range among informed buyers. Well-sourced examples of this reference circulate at this tier of the collector market — the positioning reflects the movement specification, finishing quality, and overall build standard rather than the brand name alone. This figure is a market reference estimate for research purposes — ARFWatches does not sell or transact products directly.
For real-time production updates and sourcing notes on this reference, ARFWatches maintains the most active collector discussion for this build tier.
Editorial Disclaimer: ARFWatches.com is an independent watch review and collector research platform. This page does not constitute an offer to sell any product. All market pricing figures are editorial estimates based on collector community data. Readers are responsible for ensuring compliance with the laws of their jurisdiction.
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