![]() The stainless steel case maintains the water resistance up to 300 meters and the signature unidirectional bezel made from ceramic. The result is a diver’s watch with more streamlined, contemporary proportions. Adhering to the 42.5mm diameter, Doxa has refined the case design to create a slimmer profile, measuring just 11.95mm (in contrast to the SUB 300T’s 13.65 mm), and reduced the bezel height by 0.5 mm. ![]() The latest addition to the diver’s collection is dubbed “SUB 300β,” with β translating into Beta, meaning a palette of colors and new finishes paired with a subtle bezel redesign for sleekness and an “urban elegance.” Driven by a self-winding Sellita movement, it preserves its core tool watch attributes while embracing a touch of style and sophistication. Doxa engineers succeeded in integrating the US Navy’s values into the bezel, in orange on an outer ‘depth’ ring, and in black on an inner ‘minutes’ ring. With its signature orange dial, the timepiece introduced some groundbreaking features, such as a unidirectional rotating bezel with dual dive time and depth indications to ensure a safe ascent without the need for decompression stops. At the time, divers relied on the US Navy’s no-decompression dive tables as their golden standard for determining how much time they could spend at a given depth and return to the surface without the risk of decompression sickness. First introduced in 1967, the Doxa SUB ranks among the most famous historic diver’s watches.
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