Here on Orient Place blog, we sometimes get carried away by the more
rare, expensive, and unusual Orient watches. Today, however, we'll turn our
focus back to the brand's mainstream product line. Activate Autopilot: we got
our hands on Orient's latest iteration of the classic automatic pilot watch.
Orient announced the current line of
automatic pilot watches in September 2019, and it was a most welcome announcement,
as the older generation of pilot-style Orients was discontinued, and had been
absent from the market for a while already.
It was just as welcome an announcement when the courier arrived at our
office a few days ago with a sample watch to review: the sand-color dial
version ref. RA-AC0H04Y (or, RN-AC0H04Y as the Japanese reference
goes).
How It Looks
The first thing we noticed was how identical this watch looks in real
life compared to its photos. Usually, there's a big difference between the real
thing and the pictures (even good ones, let alone the fairly simplistic pics often
presented in Orient catalogs). Here there's none.
This can be largely attributed to the watch design being truly very
simple: The case is the standard, streamlined Orient case shape, identical to
the Defender we reviewed
last year. The dial is mostly flat, and its design elements (hands, markers) are
highly contrasting. At first sight, my colleague (who is generally quite fond
of Orient) said he could see nothing of interest in the design.
The other side of the coin is, this simplicity translates to legibility,
and that is one of the essential requirements of an aviator watch. Indeed
Orient did not invent anything new here but has applied the classic "Type-B
Flieger" formula that has worked well for countless watch manufacturers,
enabling immediate and uncluttered reading of the time.
Taking this perspective, the dial is perfectly acceptable and, in fact,
just as nice as seen on aviator watches that are considerably more expensive. The
markers are not applied, but the paint is thick, giving the numerals a certain
sense of depth. The dial has a warm and grainy texture, looking even more like
sand when examined through the macro lens.
The Orient logo here is relatively unobtrusive and blends into the
background along with the small "automatic" text, allowing for a very
clean overall appearance. The one thing I'd change though is adding a millimeter
to the hour hand, and perhaps 2 mm to the minute and seconds hands (and I'm
guessing some would say, just make the watch a couple of millimeters smaller in
diameter).
The case is simply but nicely finished – brushed all round, except for
the space between the lugs, which is polished. The case back is flat and solid,
offering no view of the movement. The large crown is stamped with the brand
logo. All in all, the case design works, it's very straightforward, nothing too
elaborate, but well made.
How It Wears
This Orient is not a small watch. The steel case is 42.4mm wide without
the crown, 49.4mm long lug-to-lug, and 11.6mm thick. As such, it is what one
might call "slightly above mid-size". On my roughly 7.3" wrist,
it wears well, although visually larger than what its size suggests (and
somehow looking more prominent than that equally sized Defender I tried on last
year).
For wrists smaller than 7", or if you generally prefer smaller
watches, trying the watch on before buying is recommended. That said, it does
wear comfortably for its size, largely thanks to the moderately sized and
nicely curved lugs.
Also worth noting is the leather strap that this reference comes with. I
was a bit worried at first as it is fairly thick and initially stiff – and I
know most low-cost straps that start stiff, stay stiff for quite a while.
However, this one softened in a matter of hours, making for a positive
surprise. It is by no means a premium band, but it is good, and very fitting
for the shape and character of the watch.
If you do want to change it though, no problem, as lug width is the most
standard of all at 22mm.
How It Functions
Starting with the crown operation, we've got no complaints here. The screw-down
crown is grippy and very convenient to use. No problems at all screwing and
unscrewing it. Winding feels a bit rough, like on the Kamasu, but works well
(and unlike the Kamasu, the crown here is rock solid). Setting the time and
date is easy, as one would expect.
Once running, caliber F6722 does its job well enough. It hacks,
hand-winds as mentioned above, works very quietly and keeps an adequate time. We've
measured a deviation of +7 seconds per day.
Legibility in daylight is excellent, as already mentioned, and at least
on this reference, the contrasting dial, hands, and markers make telling the
time easy even when the sun hits the glass hard. Reading the date is a little
more tricky, as it is fairly small and blends in-between the numerals on the
dial, but that is a very small issue.
Night-time visibility is not as good. While the hands are lumed and
stand out clearly at low light, the lumed hour markers are tiny, and the room
needs to be pitch dark to notice them at all (and even then they're not super
clear). Well, unlike divers, night visibility is optional, not mandatory, on
aviator watches – but you have to keep this in mind if strong lume is your
thing. By the way, I believe the white numerals on the dark-dial variants are
in fact luminant.
On top of telling the time, the watch should work well for most everyday
purposes. It is water resistant to 100m, and feels very solid. The glass is
mineral, not sapphire, though. Acceptable at this modest price level, but again
something to keep in mind.
The Bottom Line
The Orient flight watch is officially about 250 USD, but can be found
online at prices closer to 200 USD. As such, it is close to the lower end of
Orient's range of automatic watches. One needs to keep this in mind when
judging this model.
For this price, you're getting a very capable automatic watch. It is
well made, uses a reliable movement, and just simple enough so that very little
can go wrong with it. The design is simple and not very original, but then
again – that is the intention of the watch: to offer classic aviator styling
and usability.
I do think that a case a couple of millimeters smaller (while keeping
everything else unchanged) would have made this perfect for more wrist sizes
and offer a more balanced dial. Other than that, I think that the watch
delivers good value for the money. If you're looking for an inexpensive yet
trustworthy flieger watch, this Orient is worth checking out.
The blog would like to thank Orient – Epson Europe for providing us
this Orient ref. RA-AC0H04Y for review.
I am a huge fan of Orient watches. I saw this one a little while ago and I'm impressed enough to buy one, however...for some reason...they can't be sold to Australia. Why is that?
ReplyDeleteIt's sometimes hard to tell why a certain distributor chooses which models to sell and which not... I don't think there's any limitation by the brand. Anyway - there's an abundance of online sellers who'll ship to Australia!
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