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The Jazzmaster Performer Auto 38mm is Hamilton's most disciplined dress watch: no date, no seconds hand, applied indices on a clean dial, and a 38mm case that sits where a dress watch should. H36105731 specifically delivers this in steel with a white dial, making it the most versatile configuration in the Performer line. At this size and price, it competes directly with Longines Master and Tissot Tradition while offering the H-10 movement's 80-hour reserve as a practical edge.
Hamilton introduced the Jazzmaster Performer as the restrained counterpart to the busier Jazzmaster lineup, positioning it squarely as an American-heritage dress watch for the modern market. The ref H36105731 runs the H-10 automatic, Hamilton's designation for the ETA C07.611 base caliber modified with a proprietary hairspring and barrel, which pushed the power reserve to 80 hours -- a genuine differentiator at this price tier. Production began in 2022 and the reference remains current.
The Jazzmaster line itself traces to the 1950s jazz club sponsorship era, but the Performer sub-line is a contemporary creation, not a reissue. Hamilton has kept the case dimensions and movement spec stable since launch, with no generation changes to track.
Confirm the dial is free of sunburst grain inconsistencies near the indices -- early production units occasionally showed uneven finishing at the dial edges that Hamilton's QC should have caught but did not always. The seconds-hand absence is intentional, but buyers sometimes receive the wrong reference (the date or seconds variants); verify H36105731 exactly before purchase. The leather strap on new examples is stiff and thin; budget for a replacement if comfort matters.
Water resistance is 50m, which is adequate for splashes but not swimming -- the crown seal should be checked if buying pre-owned. The H-10 is a solid movement but service access outside authorized Hamilton dealers can be inconsistent in smaller markets, so factor that into pre-owned pricing.
New, this reference retails around $750 USD in the United States, which is honest value for what you get. Pre-owned examples sell in the $500-$650 range on the secondary market with no meaningful premium for any dial variation. The white dial H36105731 holds value slightly better than the black dial equivalent due to broader appeal in the dress watch segment.
There is no speculative premium here -- this is a use-it watch, not a collector play.
The H-10 (ETA C07.611 base) carries a recommended service interval of 7-10 years under normal wear. Hamilton's authorized service network handles this at roughly $200-$350 USD depending on region and whether parts are needed. Independent watchmakers familiar with ETA movements can service it for less, though Hamilton's proprietary hairspring means some will defer to the factory.
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A solid dial on a Jazzmaster Performer is wrong; the open-work is the defining feature and any solid dial indicates a swap.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Open-worked dial revealing movement | Cal. H-10 base plate and barrel bridge visible through the open-worked dial apertures | Solid dial with no open-work indicating a dial swap to a non-Performer Jazzmaster dial |
| case | Case material and finish | Case material matches reference number specification, with consistent finish between case and bracelet | PVD coating showing base steel underneath at wear points, or case finish inconsistent with bracelet |
| dial | Date disc alignment at 3 | Date numeral centered in the aperture window at all 31 positions |
| Date numeral partially hidden or off-center in the aperture indicating disc or mechanism misalignment |