Hands-On Review EONIQ Navigator
A little while back I reviewed the DIY Watch Club Watchmaking Kit, which provided a few hours of escapism and a pretty nice watch at the end of the process that I assembled myself. If you recall, DIY Watch Club partnered with bespoke Hong Kong watch maker EONIQ - who builds custom automatic watches and allows you to customize a timepiece down to the last detail and have it shipped to you anywhere in the world.
“On top of offering selections for different watch components, we also enable users to upload their own designs and images so they can create truly unique watches,” says EONIQ founder Quinn Lai.
So after my amazing experience with DIY Watch Club, EONIQ reached out with the offer to customize my own watch! Naturally I took them up on the offer and decided to have them help me build a bronze Navigator which is the name of their pilot watch. Rebecca at EONIQ was my guide through the build process and she definitely steered me in the right direction.
The Navigator Build
With EONIQ Watches, the design is done through an easy-to-use online interface. You are able to choose:
– The case finish from stainless steel, PVD to Bronze.
I chose bronze. It's not a case material that you often find on a fleiger or pilots watch.
The bronze case is CNC-ed from a block of Aluminum Bronze. Aluminum bronze creates what is called "alumina", which is a small layer of oxide that's like patina. It's different than the CuSn 8 patina you'll find on higher end dive watches though (for the better in this case).
– The crown. Standard or Knurled. Knurled is a larger onion- style crown and I chose that. It's perfectly grippy and winding is butter-smooth. The crown has the EONIQ logo on it.
– Hands and Lume. Sword hands with a choice of four Vintage faux patina or Standard Super Luminova options. I let EONIQ pick the lume on this and it looks like Rebecca chose green C3 lume though the hands and numbers have a faux patina look. The lume is excellent.
– Dial design. Wow, there are alot of options. 25 in fact. From both B-uhr designs and subtle alternatives of that, to big number designs reminiscent of Vostoks I've seen.
I've always been a fan of the Zenith Type 20 but am not a fan of the cathedral hands on that watch. This is the dial design I chose and paired it with fleiger sword hands to great effect!
– Your preferred strap from over 15 options that include genuine European leather and stainless steel, Person and parachute straps.
I went with classic brown leather with the traditional pilot strap rivets. The strap is thick but not stiff with a signed buckle.
– The look of the bottom and top layer of the dial. You can have your name painted on the face or anything - your creativity is your only limited.
I wanted something subtle but Canadian - so I chose a lumed maple leaf above the word "automatic". I uploaded a jog of the maple leaf - it was easy.
Movement and Specs
EONIQ utilizes Miyota 8 series movements (82S0) with the ability to customize the rotor. This is a workhorse skeletonized 21 jewel movement that should be well known to most micro brand enthusiasts. Is it a super premium movement? No, but it's cost effective without sacrificing reliability - and it's easy to service.
The crystal on the Navigator is sapphire. At 44mm the watch is large enough to be prone to knocks so the sapphire crystal makes sense. It's treated with 5 layers of AR coating too and is super easy to photograph
The watch is 12.4mm thick and weighs around 75 grams.
The Verdict
My watch was built on May 25th and arrived from Hong Kong on May 29th. A shockingly fast build and ship time. Your mileage may vary, but that is impressive. I was worried though, would the watch quality suffer?
It did not. At all.
My Bronze Navigator is flawless. From the crisp dial printing, to the laser-etched "CanadaWatchGram Limited Edition" rotor, to the silky smooth bronze case, bright lume and premium leather strap this is a fantastic-looking watch that I'm really proud of and very impressed by.
Honestly, watchfam, the only thing I would improve is the movement. Perhaps high beat Miyota (9 series) just to improve the sweep of the second hand and avoid any stutter. For some a 42mm case or smaller might also make the watch more attractive. That's it.
The build quality is up there with anything in the $1,000 CDN range (the higher end of the affordable spectrum), but what makes EONIQ a great option in the growing world of made-to- order and microbrand watches is the individual care the put into it. This really felt like a quality small batch timepiece, and not a mass produced hastily assembled watch. I highly recommend this for anyone who really wants a watch that's unique to them and are looking for premium materials assembled by hand with care.
If you like this design you can order your own version of it. Simply reference this blog post and be sure to tag me on Instagram when it's completed!
https://eoniq.co/products/navigator/DN8THI8D2UJ5M7SRQ2M56
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