Editorial
The Bathyscaphe is the Fifty Fathoms you can actually wear hard. It shares the FF Automatique's bones , the cal 1315, the 300m rating, the brand's serious dive heritage , but trades aluminum for a ceramic bezel and drops the price enough to make it a realistic first Blancpain.
The name Bathyscaphe goes back to Blancpain's original 1950s dive watch program, predating what collectors now call the Fifty Fathoms Automatique. When Blancpain relaunched the Bathyscaphe in 2013 it was a deliberate choice: resurrect the sportier, more accessible branch of the FF family rather than produce a second Automatique variant. The 43mm case is more wearable than the 45mm Automatique for most wrists.
The ceramic bezel is the clearest distinction between the two lines , more scratch-resistant than aluminum, and it reads as a modern tool-watch choice rather than a vintage-faithful one. The cal 1315 movement is shared across the FF family, so you are getting the same engine regardless of which variant you choose.
The ceramic bezel insert is not rehautnable in the field , if it chips or cracks, you are looking at a bezel assembly replacement, not a polishing pass. Buyers should also confirm the dial variant: the Bathyscaphe has shipped in multiple dial colors and textures over the years, and the 5000-1110-B52A specifically refers to the black sailcloth dial configuration; mismatched reference numbers and dial descriptions are common in secondary market listings. The 43mm case wears large on smaller wrists despite the lug-to-lug being friendlier than the Automatique, so try it on if you can.
Strap condition matters more than people expect on these , the original rubber straps degrade, and a worn strap affects fit meaningfully given how the case is designed to sit on the wrist. Early Bathyscaphe examples occasionally surface with scratched crystals that were not caught at inspection; sapphire is replaceable but confirm the condition before buying.