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Rare Vintage Gotcha Tidewatch Men’s Digital Tide Tracker Sports Watch JDM 1980s

DIRECT PRICE — SAVE 10%
EBAY PRICE$99.00
DIRECT -10%$89.10
■ ONE OF A KIND — THIS IS THE ONLY ONE. ONCE IT SELLS, THIS PAGE BECOMES AN ARCHIVE.
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BRAND:
Unknown
UNIT CONDITION:
Pre-owned - Good
► SELLER'S DESCRIPTION
Up for sale is a rare vintage Gotcha Tidewatch men’s digital tide tracker sports watch from the 1980s. Designed for surfers and water sports enthusiasts, this unique digital watch features a built-in tide tracking display along with standard timekeeping functions, making it a distinctive and collectible piece from the golden age of specialty sports watches. The watch is in full working condition and all features and functions are working properly. All parts of the watch are original, including the original Gotcha branded strap. The watch has signs of use and age consistent with a vintage sports watch. The photos best describe its overall appearance and physical condition. Key Details • Brand: Gotcha • Model: Tidewatch • Era: 1980s • Display: Digital LCD • Functions: Time, Calendar, Tide Tracking and Alarm Functions • Strap: Original Gotcha branded strap • Originality: All parts original • Condition: Full working condition with signs of use and age A highly collectible vintage tide tracker watch that perfectly captures the surf culture and innovative sports watch designs of the 1980s. Ships carefully. Feel free to message me with any questions.
► ARCHIVE FILE: VINTAGE WATCHMAKING — BRAND HISTORY

The decades between the 1940s and the 1970s were the high-water mark of mass watchmaking. Factories in Switzerland, Japan, the United States, Germany, and the Soviet Union turned out mechanical watches by the tens of millions, competing on accuracy, durability, and price rather than prestige. A watch was equipment, bought to be worn daily and serviced for decades, and the engineering reflects that: robust movements, serviceable architecture, and case designs driven by use, whether the wearer was a diver, a railway worker, or someone who simply needed to be on time.

That world ended quickly. Seiko's Astron, the first production quartz wristwatch, appeared on Christmas Day 1969, and within a decade quartz had collapsed the price of accuracy. The Swiss industry lost roughly two-thirds of its workforce between 1970 and the mid-1980s, storied American factories closed, and thousands of brands disappeared or consolidated. That upheaval, now called the quartz crisis, is the dividing line of modern horology, and it is why watches from either side of it carry such distinct character: mechanical pieces from before, and the inventive early quartz and digital watches from just after.

For collectors this era is uniquely rewarding. The watches were made in volume, so honest examples still surface at fair prices, yet the craft that went into them is no longer economical to reproduce at those price points. Most mechanical movements of the period can be serviced indefinitely by a competent watchmaker, and early LCD and LED watches are artifacts of the first consumer electronics boom. The things to look for never change: original dials and hands, unpolished cases, and movements that have been maintained rather than merely survived.

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