Side by side

Bremont MBIIvsChristopher Ward C63 Valour

The numbers, the dial colors, the calibers — laid out so you can stop flipping between tabs.

MBII
BremontMBII
MSRP $5,400
C63 Valour
Christopher WardC63 Valour
MSRP $1,105

At a glance

16 of 29 specs differ
Diameter
MBII43mm
C63 Valour40mm
Power Reserve
MBII40h
C63 Valour40h
Water Resistance
MBII100m
C63 Valour150m
MSRP
MBII$5,400
C63 Valour$1,105

Full specifications

Case

8 specs
Category
Pilot
Chronograph
Diameter
43mm
40mm
Thickness
11.55mm
Lug-to-Lug
45.8mm
Lug Width
22mm
20mm
Material
Titanium (DLC coated)
Stainless Steel
Water Resistance
100m
150m
Caseback
Solid
Engraved

Crystal & Dial

2 specs
Dial Color
White
Black
Lume
None
SLN X1 BL C1

Movement

5 specs
Caliber
BE-36AE
G10
Type
Automatic
Quartz
Beat Rate
28,800 vph
768 vph
Jewels
25
4
Complications
None
Chronograph

Pricing

1 specs
MSRP
$5,400
$1,105

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What people say

Owners + reviewers, side by side

Synthesized for each watch independently from owner discussions, enthusiast forums, written reviews, and video reviewers.

Bremont MBII

The Bremont MBII is praised for its striking, high-tech pilot's watch aesthetic, reassuring heft, and quality feel, featuring an anti-shock system and customizable barrel. Owners note its condition can be excellent with minor hairlines, and it is presented with all original boxes and papers. A drawback cited is its 38-hour power reserve compared to newer movements. Overall, owners and reviewers consider the Bremont MBII affordable and a good representation of the brand.

Christopher Ward C63 Valour

The Christopher Ward C63 Valour is praised for its beautiful, deep dial with 3D applied markers and indices, its great look, and its symmetry, with some calling it one of the best-looking and most affordable chronographs available. Reviewers note its Light-catcher case with flowing curves and contrasting brushed and polished finishes, and a matte black dial with applied numerals and sub-dials featuring differently colored hands. The watch is powered by a thermocompensated, chronometer-certified quartz movement, specifically the ETA G10.212 AD, which Christopher Ward claims offers accuracy of +/- 10 seconds per year, though some users question this, citing ETA's stated accuracy of +/- 73 seconds per year. Owners are split on the use of a quartz movement in a watch at this price point, with some preferring mechanical movements, while others defend quartz for its reliability, thinner profile, accuracy, and lower service costs.

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