Home Gear The Bauhaus Sports Watch That Broke All the Rules Is Returning to Its Roots

The Bauhaus Sports Watch That Broke All the Rules Is Returning to Its Roots

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Everything But the Bezel

Since the Ahoi Neomatik 38 Date lacks a rotating bezel, it shouldn’t technically be considered a dive watch. But beyond that key missing feature and its dressy aesthetics, this watch has all the specs required to handle even intense aquatic adventures.
Nomos Glashütte

As nearly every watch-focused publication will incessantly quibble, even a naval-themed name can’t make the Ahoi Neomatik 38 Date technically qualify as a true dive watch.

And they’re, of course, technically not wrong.

That’s because it lacks a rotating bezel—a crucial feature that helps divers easily track the time elapsed underwater.

A detailed view of the dial of the Nomos Glashütte Ahoi Neomatik 38 Date in White darkened to show its lumed dialNomos Glashütte

However, if we’re being real here, most owners of dive watches never actually dive with them, or use that all-important bezel for anything other than timing something cooking on a stove.

This technicality aside, despite its dressy, design-forward looks, the Ahoi Neomatik 38 Date has every other feature you’d expect from an aquatic adventure timepiece, including a screw down crown, crown guards, and a 200-meter water resistance rating.

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