Side by side

Bremont Williams RacingvsOak & Oscar The Olmsted 38

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

Williams Racing
BremontWilliams Racing
MSRP $7,000
The Olmsted 38
Oak & OscarThe Olmsted 38
MSRP $1,775

At a glance

17 of 29 specs differ
Diameter
Williams Racing43mm
The Olmsted 3838mm
Power Reserve
Williams Racing40h
The Olmsted 3842h
Water Resistance
Williams Racing
The Olmsted 38100m
MSRP
Williams Racing$7,000
The Olmsted 38$1,775

Full specifications

Case

8 specs
Category
Chronograph
Field
Diameter
43mm
38mm
Thickness
15.8mm
10.8mm
Lug-to-Lug
44.9mm
Lug Width
22mm
20mm
Material
Titanium
316L Stainless Steel
Water Resistance
100m
Caseback
Solid
Solid screw-down

Crystal & Dial

4 specs
Crystal Shape
Flat
Double-domed
AR Coating
Inner
Underside
Dial Color
Brown
Green
Lume
None
Super-LumiNova

Movement

4 specs
Caliber
Sellita SW300
Beat Rate
28,800 vph
4 vph
Power Reserve
40h
42h
Complications
None
GMT, Chronograph, Date

Pricing

1 specs
MSRP
$7,000
$1,775

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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 Williams Racing

The Bremont Williams Racing features a panda dial with blue accents and a tachymeter bezel, housed in a 43mm TripTick case. It is powered by a chronometer-rated BE-53AE automatic movement with a 42-hour power reserve and a custom rotor. While the 15.8mm height is considered reasonable for a chronograph, the 43mm case size may require trying it on for those preferring smaller watches. Overall, reviewers highlight the motorsport-inspired design and robust build of the Bremont Williams Racing.

Oak & Oscar The Olmsted 38

Oak & Oscar The Olmsted 38 is praised for its sharp, stealthy aesthetic with a durable ceramic-coated stainless steel case and a clean, no-date dial. Reviewers highlight its excellent wearability at 38mm and the value proposition at $1,475, which includes two strap options. The watch features a sandwich dial with stencil numerals and orange accents, powered by a modified ETA 2892-A2 movement. Overall, reviewers find Oak & Oscar The Olmsted 38 to be a modern and aggressive take on the classic field watch, offering exceptional value.

From video reviewers

The Olmsted 38 features tightly executed tolerances and an ultra-fine level of finishing. Reviewers did not reach a consensus on any weaknesses. Reviewers did not explicitly disagree on any points.

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