
Live pricing is coming soon. Get notified when it is available for this reference.
The HydroConquest 41mm is Longines' current production dive watch: 300m water resistance, a unidirectional ceramic bezel, and the in-house-branded L888.4 on a price tag that undercuts most Swiss competitors. It covers every practical diving need without the Rolex or Tudor premium, and the wide dial palette means there is a version for almost any taste. For a collector who wants a capable, no-apology sport watch from a historically serious Swiss manufacturer, this is the honest choice.
Longines introduced the HydroConquest name in the 1960s, but the current 41mm generation dates from roughly 2014, with the ceramic bezel arriving around 2017 and the L888.4 caliber (based on the ETA A31.L01) standardized across the line by 2020. The ref. L3.781 family covers the steel bracelet variants in this generation; L3.782 carries the rubber strap versions.
Longines has offered this ref in blue, green, black, and khaki dials, with ceramic or steel bezel inserts depending on configuration. The 43mm sibling (L3.782) and a slimmer 39mm version also exist, but the 41mm is the volume seller and the one with the widest secondary market presence. No major movement swap has occurred in the current generation; the L888.4 has been stable throughout.
Check the ceramic bezel insert for chips along the edge: the material is hard but brittle, and impacts that would only scratch steel will crack ceramic. On pre-owned examples, confirm the crown screws down fully and the case back seal shows no signs of improper re-sealing after a battery swap or case opening by a non-watchmaker. The bracelet's clasp extension mechanism is functional but the tolerances loosen with wear; inspect for play before buying.
Dial color can shift slightly between production runs, so if you are matching a specific shade (the green in particular varies), compare to recent retailer photos rather than older reference images. Confirm the reference number on the case back matches the dial configuration you expect, as grey-market bundles occasionally mix components.
New retail sits between roughly $1,100 and $1,500 USD depending on dial and bracelet configuration, and authorized dealers frequently discount, making grey-market pricing less compelling than for comparable Swiss sport watches. On the secondary market, the blue and green ceramic bezel variants hold value better than the black-dial steel bezel models, which trade closer to $700-$850 used. The khaki dial is a lower-volume variant that attracts a slight premium among buyers who want something less common.
The Tissot Seastar 1000 competes directly at a lower price with similar specs; buyers choosing the HydroConquest are paying for the Longines brand history and marginally better finishing.
The L888.4 (ETA A31.L01 base) is a robust, widely-serviced movement. Longines recommends a service interval of roughly 5 to 7 years, and an authorized service runs approximately $300 to $500 USD depending on parts needed. Independent watchmakers familiar with ETA-based movements can service it for less, which is a genuine advantage over proprietary calibers that require brand service centers.
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.
Cal. L888.4 silicon hairspring must be confirmed via the caseback stamp; the ceramic bezel insert cannot be repainted and chips are permanent.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Silicon hairspring designation | "Silicon" text on the caseback alongside the caliber designation; text is crisp and part of the original engraving | Missing "Silicon" text on a watch claimed to be the L888.4 generation; any aftermarket caseback that lacks the original stamping |
| case | Ceramic bezel insert uniformity | Uniform matte color across the entire bezel insert; no visible chips, cracks, or color variation | Any color variation on the insert surface; chips visible even under normal lighting; insert that appears to have a painted or coated surface repair |
| case |
| Bezel click detent |
| Bezel clicks firmly at each position and does not backslide; 60 distinct clicks for the dive scale |
| Loose bezel that slides between clicks; bezel with fewer than 60 click positions; bezel that rotates in both directions |
| crystal | Anti-reflective coating condition | AR coating is uniform with a slight blue or green tint; no delamination or crazing visible | Crazing or spider-web delamination of the AR coating; heavy scratches that indicate the crystal has been polished or replaced with non-OEM glass |