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Shortly before and after TAG's takeover of Heuer in the mid-1980s, the latter produced a line of legendary divers, first in Monin, France, with automatic movements, and subsequently in Switzerland with Swiss quartz movements - the example here is one of those latter divers, a 1990 Heuer 1000 Ref. 980.613D dive watch, on its original stainless-steel bracelet and with Heuer box & papers.

 

Make no mistake - this is one of the watches that saved Heuer from bankruptcy during the 1980s.  Per Hodinkee in "Why The Heuer Diver Professional Deserves A Lot More Credit Than It Gets," "Its stunning success was unexpected and came at the best possible time for the company.  In Jack Heuer’s own words: 'We could not imagine that this model would be the very watch that was to help the company recover.'  Surprisingly, this glorious hero was not a chronograph – hell, most of the time it's powered by a quartz movement.  So let's settle this injustice and look at a relatively obscure diving watch, despite it being a bestseller from 1979 to this very day.  This is the Heuer Diver Professional."

 

This quintessential no-nonsense Heuer tool watch was produced between circa 1979-84, but in some important way it continued to be made throughout the 1990s (more on this below).  For a brief history of these amazing Heuer divers, as noted in a fascinating Hodinkee article, “A Personal Note: Marking Time With A Humble Heuer” - “In 1980, Heuer decided it was time to build a proper dive watch.  Sure, years earlier, it had fitted its "Automotive-Aviation" Autavia chronograph with a diving bezel, but the brand was largely focused on motorsports watches, which is where it had built its reputation."

 

But in the late 1970s, as Jack Heuer tells it in his autobiography, “The Times Of My Life (2013),” Heuer was at a sporting goods trade show in Europe and was approached by a diving equipment company having trouble finding quality dive watches.

 

Before that fateful show, Heuer was not doing well as a company and its situation had begun deteriorating as early as late 1974 (along with most of the Swiss watchmaking industry, badly hit by the quartz crisis caused by Seiko).  Quartz watches were more technically advanced than mechanical watches, and at a lower price point too, making them fierce competitors for the traditional Swiss companies.

 

It is in this grim context Jack Heuer saw an opportunity at that 1979 sporting goods trade show.  Heuer got the idea to address a recurrent complaint voiced regarding the difficulty in finding reliable private label watches for underwater sports – Heuer’s expertise at this time was racing chronographs, but it took the challenge regardless, and teamed up with French supplier G. Monnin.

 

Per Heuer, “To our great surprise our new diving watches were very well received by the market."  So much so, in fact, that the following year Heuer began offering the Diver Professional in four different sizes and a multitude of dial configurations.

 

After a year of outsourcing to Monnin, Heuer took over the manufacturing of the Ref. 844, re-named the 980.XXX, and sold in a myriad of versions, with different case sizes in gold or steel (even two-tone), a PVD version (both black and camo green), and orange, black, and full-lume dials, all with bracelet or rubber strap.  Most came in four different sizes (28mm, 32mm, 38mm, and 42mm, with different finishes – and yes, even a full lume dial variant.

 

But did Heuer’s overall efforts help the company?

 

As Hodinkee tells it, “When it comes to vintage Heuer, it's the historic chronographs that constantly grab the headlines.  I mean, who hasn't recently read a story about some uber-rare, record-breaking Autavia, Carrera, or Monaco?  Yet, there's one watch that played a critical role in Heuer’s history that remains almost entirely overlooked." 

 

The Heuer diver “…immediately sold very well for Heuer, and continued to do so even after Heuer became TAG Heuer in 1985.  After the merger, the line was kept as is, and quickly expanded… [and] eventually became the Aquaracer in 2004.  Looking at the history, the real impact of the Heuer Professional is striking: In some form or another, these dive watches have been a best-seller for (TAG) Heuer since 1979!"

 

"There was no formal endorsement, although it was recently discovered that Timothy Dalton wore two examples in the James Bond film "The Living Daylights (1987)."  If you have read Jack Heuer’s biography you might also remember the actress Bo Derek sporting a ladies’ piece, naked on a beach (it's page 258 of Jack’s biography).”

 

This Heuer 980.613D diver comes on its original stainless-steel dive bracelet, and with nylon strap, rugged travel case, inner/outer boxes, warranty paperwork, and springbar tool.

1990 TAG Heuer 1000 Ref. 980.613D Dive Watch, w/Orig. Bracelet

$0.00Price
Out of Stock
  • DIAL: Heuer-signed dark blue dial; script remains crisp and defined - no blemishes or imperfections.  Date display at the 3 o’clock position works as designed.   Matching stainless-steel “Mercedes” hour, minute, and second hands, with matching lume.  Lume on dial and hands remains bright, following exposure to strong light.

     

    CASE: Stainless-steel case measures 38mm (41.5mm w/crown) x 45mm, with matching caseback.  Blue bezel insert is in good condition, despite age; bezel rachets when rotated counter-clockwise, as designed.

     

    CRYSTAL: Original saphire crystal has several small scratches, but is otherwise deep scratch and crack-free.

     

    BAND: This Heuer diver comes on a generic stainless-steel oyster dive bracelet, which will fit up to an approx. 7.25 inch wrist (or approx. 8.5 wirst if the wetsuit extension is used), links remain tight.  This diver also comes with a black nylon strap.

     

    MOVEMENT: Heuer 2.90 quartz movement, hack complication works as designed.

     

    CROWN: Stainless-steel screw-down crown.

     

    This Heuer diver comes with TAG Heuer inner/outer boxes & Heuer warranty paperwork; outer box has significant wear.

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