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Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Men's Watch 1434

Rating Rated 5/5 based on Review(s)
US$453.00US$248.00 Instock In stock
Style Model: 1434
Sold 7 within last 30 days
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Replica Invicta Watches
About Our Replica Invicta Watches

No matter how expensive Replica Invicta watches from China are eternal. They are made from carefully selected materials and quality events. We offer designer Invicta replica watches for almost a decade. We represent one of the best replica shoes with a large product catalog. We are dedicated to carrying only the highest quality replicas and maintaining professional and attentive customer service. We want you to be satisfied with our products and services!

Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Men's Watch 1434
Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Men's Watch 1434 1
  • WATCH INFORMATION
  • VIEW LARGE IMAGE
  • CARE & MAINTENANCE
  • CUSTOMER REVIEWS
  • RELATED PRODUCT

Watch Details

Stainless steel case with a black polyurethane strap with stainless steel barrel inserts. Fixed stainless steel bezel. Blue dial with luminous silver-tone hands and Arabic numeral and index hour markers. Minute markers around the outer rim. Dial Type: Analog. Luminescent hands and markers. Quartz movement. Scratch resistant mineral crystal. Pull / push crown with screw down canteen. Solid case back. Case diameter: 52 mm. Case thickness: 16 mm. Round case shape. Band width: 26 mm. Band length: 9.25 inches. Tang clasp. Water resistant at 100 meters / 330 feet. Additional Info: suitable for snorkeling, as well as swimming, but not diving. Casual watch style. Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Mens Watch 1434.

Information

  • Brand:Invicta
  • Series:Russian Diver
  • Model:1434
  • Gender:Men's
  • Movement:Quartz
  • Engine:Caliber: 513

Case

  • Case Size:52 mm
  • Case Thickness:16 mm
  • Crown:Pull / Push with Screw down Canteen
  • Case Shape:Round
  • Case Back:Solid
  • Bezel:Fixed Stainless Steel

Dial

  • Dial Type:Analog
  • Dial Color:Blue
  • Crystal:Scratch Resistant Mineral
  • Hands:Luminous Silver-tone
  • Second Markers:Minute Markers around the outer rim
  • Dial Markers:Arabic Numeral and Index
  • Luminiscence:Hands and Markers

Band

  • Band Type:Bracelet
  • Band Material:Black Polyurethane with Stainless Steel
  • Band Width:26 mm
  • Clasp:Tang

Features

  • Water Resistance:100 meters / 330 feet
  • Functions:Hour, Minute, Second
  • Features:Stainless Steel

Additional Info

  • Style:Casual Watches
  • Item Code:
  • Internal ID:IN1434

Invicta 1434 Features:

  • 1. Invicta Watches provide the idea of high cost performance.
  • 2. Topnotch Men's Invicta collection has really attractive looks that outstanding high quality.
  • 3. Own same technology as genuine watch.
  • 4. Fashionable style provides you great experience.
  • 5. The model number of the watch is 1434.
  • 6. The first-rate watch enables you to catch the fashion trend.
  • 7. This particular preeminent watch is equipped with a fine Quartz movement.
  • 8. Highlight your style and accentuate your taste!
  • 9. An ideal and exceptional appearance enables you to attract the attention of public.
  • 10. Black Polyurethane with Stainless Steel bracelet makes your wrist really feel very comfy.
  • 11. Two important features: water-proof and dust-proof function.
  • 12. The watch is extremely readable along with Silver Blue dial.
  • 13. To be the focus of a party.
  • 14. Case Diameter: 52 mm.
  • 15. We strive to make you 100% satisfactory.

Payment & Shipping

We will arrange the delivery of Invicta 1434 replica as soon as your payment is confirmed. Please make sure that your telephone number and email address are right, because the custome service representatives will contact you and identify your information, in order to deal with the shipments of your order. Generally, we deliver products through EMS, DHL, UPS, etc. And the tracking number will be sent to you via email once the watch is shipped. The shipping fee of any order is free. The package will be arrived about 7 to 15 days. We accept payment by PayPal, Visa/Master card, MoneyGram and Bank Transfer. If you pay by MoneyGram or Bank Transfer, we can offer you 15% off. If you have any questions about shipping and payment, please contact us freely, we'll be glad to help you!

Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Men's Watch 1434 Watch Image

Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Men's Watch 1434 1

Watch Care & Maintenance

The 7 Essentials for Fine Watch Maintenance
Respect Your Fine Timepiece and it Will Last You a Lifetime
A fine timepiece is a precision instrument. Literally hundreds of precisely engineered components must work together in perfect harmony to keep your watch running properly. With proper care, the fine watch you buy today will become a treasured heirloom that you can pass down to your children who in turn can pass it on to their children. If you ignore your watch, however, you’re asking for trouble.
How can you ensure that your fine timepiece will continue to run forever?
Follow these seven simple rules and you’ll have already extended your watch’s life:
1. Know if your watch movement is quartz or mechanical and act accordingly
2. Never over-wind your hand-wound mechanical watch
3. Remember that water resistant doesn’t mean waterproof
4. Don’t wear your watch while playing golf or tennis
5. Remember to wear your watch
6. Keep your watch clean
7. Choose your watch repair facility wisely. (View Details)

Products Reviews:

Invicta Russian Diver 1434 Reviews
Simple, very light and the colors are bright. The locking clasp to hold the band in place is really nice.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United States Monte Sereno
Invicta Russian Diver 1434 Reviews
I love the vintage look so I couldn't wait for this piece. However, I have to say that I was disappointed there is no sparkle. But the colors are beautiful and I like that it doubles as a watch and bracelet so I kept it.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United Stated Lansing
Invicta Russian Diver 1434 Reviews
just like on website, very honest seller
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Philippines N/a
Invicta Russian Diver 1434 Reviews
Everything about the Invicta Russsian Diver Blue Dial Black Polyurethane Men's 1434 watch is really nice, except for one thing, The band on the watch is to tight on my wrist.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United States Potomac
Invicta Russian Diver 1434 Reviews
I get a lot of compliments when I wear this Invicta watch. It's stylish and funky. The only thing that really stood out upon receiving the watch is the length of the band. I have a fairly average sized wrist (6) and it's on a few of the last holes. If your wrist is larger than 6-inches you might want to pass on purchasing this watch. Overall, I love it!
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from USA St. Charles

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Watches News

History - The chronograph told by its dial

The chronograph is plagued by a common tendency to describe its techniques, its frequency, its materials, but rarely its dial - almost as if a precision instrument had no right to be considered in artistic terms. This is a bad mistake, since the history of the chronograph cannot be summed up as merely a set of technical data. Its story is also told on its face, the dial. Yes, the chronograph is a watch just like any other - or at least almost so!

Chronograph or chronometer?
While this statement seems obvious today, that has not always been the case: the chronograph was not in fact immediately worn or referred to as such - despite the fact that the invention by Nicolas Rieussec in 1821 was aptly named, since the "chrono-graph" or "time-writing" instrument literally placed a drop of ink on the dial to provide a visual indication of the elapsed time.

These days, the chronometer is also very much front and centre on the watchmaking stage - but what's the difference? A chronometer's precision is guaranteed by independent certification, generally granted by the Swiss Official Chronometer Testing Institute (COSC). Other institutions, such as observatories, may also certify these models, providing the same test criteria are met.

The dial, an open book telling a tale of precision
The chronograph dial took shape in accordance with two constraints: its functions, and the space in which they were expressed. Thus, at a time when pocket watches and wristwatches had not yet made their appearance, large wooden cases made it possible to enjoy the luxury of assigning a separate dial to each function. When Louis Frederic Perrelet was granted the split-second chronograph patent, the two measuring hands were dissociated and each appeared on its own dial!

The conditions in which chronographs were used gradually evolved, progressing from the grandstand of a racecourse to the busy practice of a medical doctor or judge's courtroom. In other words, it became useful for men of action in practical situations and thus more widely available. The need to be carried around and indeed worn meant it had to leave the relative comfort of the wooden box and appear in a pocket chronograph format. Certain pioneers, such as Louis Moinet in 1816 (inventor of the chronograph), had anticipated this size half a century earlier. Nonetheless, these were at the time exceptional instruments reserved for members of an elite circle mainly composed of astronomers.

The advent of the pocket chronograph
Various industrialists such as Leon Breitling quickly stepped into the breach and the chronograph became an ideal travelling companion in all kinds of activities to which it was systematically adopted. Chronographs for motor races, horse races and cycle races thus begin to emerge, and the Robert brothers in Villeret specialised in these high-precision movements made be their company that later became known as Mercure and subsequently Minerva. A few kilometres above them in the Jura, a brand based in Saint-Imier made an indelible imprint on the destiny of chronograph making: Longines. All these models displayed the same round shape with two central hands sweeping over a white base. The chronograph's aesthetic differentiation at the time stemmed from its scale or its case-back decoration.
 


An instrument for professionals
Above and beyond measuring these mostly sports-related activities, the chronograph also took on a professional purpose. Ball Watch got things started with its timepieces for railroad workers. Vacheron Constantin and Blancpain also produced several models intended for doctors, the famous "pulsometers" measuring their patients' heart rate.
 

The face of the chronograph changed accordingly, since it no longer measured an elapsed time, but instead a frequency. This spurred the appearance of dial "bases" picking up those used on telemeters and later on tachometers. The military vocation of some chronographs even led to the development of dials bearing scales designed to facilitate reading ordnance survey maps. As they steadily became more accurate, chronographs were in turn enriched with 30-minute and 12-hour or even 24-hour subdial totalizers. While this ever-increasing sum of information was no problem within the broad space available on a pocket watch, the emergence of the wristwatch was to radically change the situation.

Wrist mechanism
The advent of the wrist chronograph in the 1930s meant taking a whole new turn: the dial design was no longer shaped by the function, but instead by the watch's technical capacities. In other words, the movement dictated the aesthetic. The huge 13-ligne Valjoux 23 calibre typical of a period between World Wars in which discretion was the watchword, imposed the need for an XL dial proving just how bly rooted the pocket-watch format still was at the time.

From the 1940s onwards, wristworn models entered the "complications" era. An Angelus calibre known as the ChronoDato and much sought-after among collectors is the finest embodiment of the association between a chronograph and a calendar. It was later followed by the Valjoux 88 complete with a moon-phase display.

One chronograph, two design schools
From then onwards, two aesthetic schools of thought were to face off: one dedicated to "pure" chronographs and another to chronographs complemented by various horological complications.
The former soon found expression through bi-compax or tri-compax models equipped with two or three counters, positioned at 3, 6 and 9 o'clock - a layout still used to this day.

Does that imply the design of a chronograph has remained unchanged for the past 70 years? Basically so, apart from the few exceptions represented by shaped timekeeping movements. Landeron was a keen purveyor of such calibres, which were notably fitted in certain Movado prototypes that are now extremely rare. Invicta also attempted this feat in the 1940s, and a twin-faced Reverso is the most contemporary example of this style.

Complication chronographs meanwhile forged their own distinctive aesthetic, given the need to concentrate more information into the same space. The calendar chronograph is the most frequent type and Zenith for example developed its Espada soon after the introduction of its El Primero calibre, by adding this calendar. Angelus later changed things up by offering the first digital date added to the chronograph with its ChronoDatoLuxe, followed by A. Lange & Söhne with its Datograph. Perpetual calendar chronographs later become the hallmark of Patek Philippe, which has recently reaffirmed its expertise in the field with its Reference 5951 model launched in 2014.

Should we expect to see the emergence of a new era in which the dial of the mechanical chronograph will be complemented by electronic indications? The hybrid watch with a mechanical heart and a quartz movement already exists, albeit generally for professional usage. Smartwatches have now also arrived on the scene, and may well give a whole new face to the chronograph dial.