Editorial
The Avenger Chronograph 43 is Breitling's tool-watch answer to the question nobody asked politely: what if a military chronograph had 300 meters of water resistance? Steel, large pushers, screwdown crown, and a dial engineered for legibility under pressure. Collectors drawn to purpose-built instruments will find it honest and capable; those who want a dressy chrono should look elsewhere.
Breitling introduced the current Avenger Chronograph 43 in 2019, consolidating the Avenger family under a cleaner lineup. The reference A13317101B1X1 runs the Breitling Caliber 13, a regulated ETA Valjoux 7750 with column wheel added via Breitling's own module. The 7750 base has been an industry workhorse since the 1970s and needs no defense, though Breitling markets this as an in-house-adjacent movement by virtue of the added complication layer.
The Avenger name stretches back to the 2000s Avenger Seawolf generation, and the 43mm format replaced earlier 44-45mm models as part of a sizing rationalization. A rubber-strap variant (A13317101B1W1) and a third-party strap version round out the immediate family without meaningful spec differences.
The Valjoux 7750 is a column-wheel movement in this spec but verify the chronograph function before buying pre-owned: worn reset hammers produce imprecise reset, and the reset cam is a known service item in high-use examples. Check the screwdown crown for threading wear; the Avenger sees more field use than most chronographs and crowns get cross-threaded. Pushers should feel crisp with a positive detent in both start/stop and reset positions, any mushiness points to a service need.
Confirm the caseback seal has not been opened by an independent shop without re-pressure-testing, particularly on examples marketed as "diver-safe" given the 300m rating. The rubber strap variants use a proprietary lug width that limits aftermarket options if you want to keep the tool-watch character.