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The DA36 is the clearest expression of what Damasko builds: a 40mm field watch in ice-hardened steel that resists scratching through metallurgy rather than coating. At 1,200 N/mm², the case material is in a different category from standard watch steel, and it shows in daily wear. German engineering, no ceremony.
Damasko launched the DA36 in 2008 as part of their core field watch line, built around the company's proprietary ice-hardening process developed in Bavaria. The process drives the steel's hardness to roughly three times that of conventional watch case material, a specification Damasko achieved through in-house metallurgical work rather than surface treatments or DLC. The 40mm case size was a deliberate choice for a tool watch that reads clean and wears practically on a range of wrists.
Since launch, the reference has remained largely unchanged, which is itself a statement: there has been nothing obvious to fix. It occupies a specific niche in German watchmaking where material science is the primary design feature.
The ETA 2824-2 inside is a reliable movement but a commodity caliber, and buyers expecting in-house finishing at this price will be disappointed. The case finishing is matte and deliberately industrial; if you want a watch that photographs with drama, this is not it. Damasko's distribution is narrow and centered on German and European retailers, which can make pre-purchase handling difficult depending on where you are.
Straps are proprietary-width or require adapters on some configurations, so factor that into accessory planning. Finally, the scratch resistance of the case does not extend to the crystal, which is standard sapphire and will mark like any other watch.
The DA36 trades in the 600 to 900 EUR range new, and used examples rarely dip far below retail because demand is steady and production volume is modest. It does not appreciate, but it holds value well relative to Swiss tool watches in the same price tier. Grey market pricing is close to authorized retail, which means there is little arbitrage available and little reason to avoid buying new.
The ETA 2824-2 is one of the most-serviced movements in independent watchmaking, and any competent watchmaker can source parts and perform a full service without Damasko involvement. Service intervals of 5 to 7 years are typical for this caliber under normal wear. Damasko does offer factory service from Germany, but it is rarely necessary given the movement's broad parts availability.
One of the most widely serviced calibers in the world; any competent independent can handle it. Parts are inexpensive and stocked everywhere.
Community + OSINT signals haven’t landed for this reference yet. We don’t publish a rating against zero signal — the number would mean nothing. Editorial body + caliber + market value still surface above; ratings appear once the signal corpus does.
The icehardened case is the story; any deep scratch on a DA36 is a major anomaly worth investigating.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | Case surface condition | Near-scratch-free surface consistent with icehardened steel; light contact marks only | Deep scratches on the case; indicates non-genuine case or severe impact |
| case | Polish indicators | Original brushed/satin surface texture intact; no signs of buffing or polishing | Polished case surfaces; icehardened steel cannot be polished conventionally |
| movement | ETA 2824-2 movement | ETA 2824-2 visible through caseback; appropriate Swiss auto movement for this reference | Wrong movement; movement swap |
