
All refunds must be credited to the same tender used for the original purchase. Alternatively, you may elect shipping to our facility with all the original paperwork. On presentation of the original receipt, your purchases may be returned or exchanged at any of our store locations. 30-Day Returns For All Other Purchases:Īll other online purchases can be returned or exchanged within 30 days from when they are shipped or collected. Timepieces purchased online can be returned or exchanged within 10 days from when they are shipped or collected. We offer the following return services to make your experience as pleasant as possible. Our commitment to you does not end at delivery. Closed Easter Sunday, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas dayĪlternatively, you can email the E-commerce team at Return Policy If you have any questions or concerns regarding your order, Mayors’ E-Commerce team can be reached at 1-800-4-MAYORS (1-80), option 1, during the following times (Eastern Time): Tracking information is available upon request. To find out more about delivery, click here. boxes nor third party forwarding services. For security purposes, every delivery requires an adult signature Mayors does not deliver to P.O. There are few watchmakers out there that offer a dive watch, at this price range, with a comparable level of case finishing.Our secure shipping service delivers Monday - Saturday between 8:00 a.m. Cartier typically is very keen on ensuring the finishing is something they focus on in their very high to mid-range luxury watches such as the diver. Much of the Calibre Diver case is brushed but there are fine polished elements along the edges of the lugs and other areas. I do tend to like the look of a Calibre on a bracelet but on the rubber strap it fits so snugly and wears like a glove. The last Calibre I wore was on a bracelet. For my wrist at least it wears wonderfully, wrapping around my wrist with those curved lugs. The 42mm wide case is a great size that wears large but is really reasonable in its dimensions.

Much of the watch is standard Calibre which is a good thing.

#Cartier diver watch iso#
Overall I feel that most “thickness conscious” watch lovers will have nothing to complain about.Īs a “real diving tool” the Calibre Diver is ISO 6425 certified and pressure tested in water before leaving the factory. It is also just over 1mm thicker than the standard Calibre model. That isn’t exactly “ultra-thin,” but is certainly not thick for a modern dive watch. First of all, this is among the thinnest 300 meters dive watches out there being 11mm thick. Honestly, if you are a typical dive watch guy there is a lot to find appealing here if you want to ignore that you suddenly have a status watch on your wrist when wanting to be active. What I want to do is explain the watch to guys who typically like dive watches but not Cartier – at least a sporty Cartier. Many people will already like the Calibre Diver without me having to explain it to them. Sure the diver has a rotating diver’s bezel and a slightly bolder dial, but aside from the rubber strap and deeper water resistance this is the same classy men’s watch I’ve come to really enjoy. To be honest not that much is different from the standard three-hand Cartier compared to the Diver. While I sort of expected that 2014 was going to bring us a Calibre GMT, it rather gave us a diving version of the original. The Calibre has been one of our favorite men’s pieces from Cartier and we’ve known that it was to serve as a foundation for a range of new models. We debuted the Cartier Calibre Diver here back before we got a hands-on look at it at the SIHH 2014 watch show. Yes, there are Cartier “sport” watches… but a legit diver, water resistant to 300 meters that you can still wear with a tie and be taken seriously by Europeans taste makers? I didn’t think it possible but the Calibre Diver is it.

I am not even sure that a dive watch from the famously elegant and classy Parisian brand makes sense on paper, but now that one exists I sort of really want it. As mixed up and backwards as the industry may be, it still has the power to create items that I suddenly desire which I would have never thought appealing until they were brought to my attention.

That is how the peculiar “desire engine” of the watch industry works. One of the last things I was expecting from Cartier for 2014 was a dive watch, and now that we have one I can barely imagine not wanting it.
