Editorial
The Khaki Field Automatic 38mm is Hamilton's answer to collectors who want the field watch aesthetic with the convenience of automatic winding. H70455533 runs the H-10 movement, a heavily modified ETA C07.611 with an 80-hour power reserve that puts most entry-level automatics to shame. The 38mm case sits at the sweet spot where the watch works equally well on a NATO strap at a desk or on a trail without reading oversized.
Hamilton introduced the Khaki Field Automatic alongside the manual-wind version, positioning the two as parallel offerings at a small price premium for the self-winding caliber. The H-10 movement debuted around 2014 and has been the engine in these watches since, making the H70455533 reference consistent from its 2018 production entry through the current run. There have been no significant case or dial revisions in this reference; what you find today is functionally identical to an early example.
The date window at 3 o'clock is the most divisive design element, absent in the manual-wind version, and it is the primary reason some collectors actively prefer the hand-wind variant.
The crown and case back gaskets are the first failure points on used examples; ask sellers about the last pressure test or service record before buying pre-owned. The bidirectional rotor winding system is efficient but the rotor bearing can develop play over years of use, showing up as a slight rattle when the watch is moved; this is fixable but adds to service cost. Dial condition matters more than on sportier watches because the matte green surface scratches and discolors unevenly from UV or chemical exposure.
The date wheel magnification is light and the date font is not always centered on lower-tolerance examples, worth inspecting in hand if buying new. Crystal chips are common on heavily worn examples given the standard sapphire with no underside AR coating on entry references.