Experience the world of submariners

Une tradition navale

Located in Saint-Petersburg on the shores of the Baltic Sea, the Raketa Watch Factory always had a tradition of making watches for Soviet seamen and submariners. Living underwater for many months, Soviet submarine crews needed a sturdy watch with a robust 24-hour movement to allow them to distinguish day from night. To this day, Raketa continues the tradition of producing specialised watches for submariners.

Kashalot

Ракета “Русский код” 0286 Raketa «Sonar Kashalot» 0288

Une montre avec du titane du sous-marin “Kashalot”

2800

SONAR KASHALOT

This is the ultimate watch for Russian submariners. Its bezel is made from titanium of the Russian submarine “Kashalot”. The hands are inspired by the design of the hands in the submarines’ control panels. These hands are powered by a Raketa 24 hour automatic movement to allow submariners to distinguish day from night during their long underwater missions.

AKULA CLASS SUBMARINES

When the Akula class nuclear powered submarines (their soviet designation was Shchuka-B) first entered service in the Soviet Navy in 1984, the western world was shocked to discover that they could rival their American counterparts in quietness and survivability. To this day these silent submarines still plough the oceans. Each Akula Class submarine has its own name: the titanium used in the Raketa “Sonar Kashalot” model comes from the submarine K-322 “Kashalot”.

“KASHALOT” TITANIUM IN THE WATCH

The bezel of this watch is made from titanium of the submarine K-322 “Kashalot” (project 971) laid down in the Soviet Union in 1986. The metal was obtained during the submarine’s deconstruction at the Amur Shipbuilding Plant and was officially given to the Raketa Watch Factory. Each watch has a certificate of metal origin.

Sonar

Ракета “Русский код” 0286 Raketa «Sonar» 0317

Découvrez l’univers des sous-mariniers !

1900

RAKETA “SONAR”

The Raketa “Sonar” model is a submariner’s watch by design and functionality:

  • the dial and hands are luminescent to allow submariners to read the time in the dark,
  • a bi-directional rotor doubles the winding-up efficiency of the watch in the cramped conditions of the submarine,
  • 6 lines (in red and blue colours) divide the perimeter of the dial into 6 quarters allowing each crewmember to keep count of his shifts and
  • it has a 24 hour movement to enable submariners to distinguish day from night in the dephts of the oceans.
Posez vos questions

preloader