Movement details, case and finishing analysis, market context, and collector perspective on this piece — laid out below. The sourcing reference is at the end of the review.
The Omega Seamaster Universal Time 220.92.43.22.99.001 with a blac occupies a specific position in the superclone catalogue — one where the design brief is ambitious enough that build quality genuinely determines whether the piece delivers or disappoints. This review is written for the buyer who wants to know what to look for before making a decision.
The 43mm case is built in 904L stainless steel, following the original reference geometry across lug width, case band, and crown placement without the dimensional shortcuts that lower-tier production accepts.
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 anti-reflective coating on the crystal creates the dial depth that cheaper builds lose under direct light, where an uncoated crystal reflects back and flattens the visual effect.
The Swiss ETA 2836-2 Automatic Movement 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 100m 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.
The exhibition caseback provides a direct view of the movement architecture — rotor finish, bridge layout, and plate decoration are all visible, and on a well-sourced build these elements confirm the quality of what is inside the case rather than just what is presented on the exterior.
The comparison between this and the Planet Ocean variant comes down to case size preference — the movement specification is equivalent, and the dial layout differs primarily in subdial arrangement.
Who This Reference Suits
The informed buyer who approaches the superclone category with the same seriousness they would apply to any significant acquisition will find this reference well worth their consideration. It is not the easiest entry point to the category, but it is one of the most rewarding for the collector who engages with it properly.
Market Context
Higher-grade sourced examples of this reference generally circulate in the $750–950 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.
The collector community tracking this reference for sourcing updates is most active at ARFWatches — factory run notes and availability changes are documented there as they happen.
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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