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The Globemaster Annual Calendar is Omega's most useful complication in the constellation line: a Master Chronometer-certified movement paired with a calendar that only needs one correction per year, at the end of February. The pie-pan dial, fluted bezel, and 41mm steel case make it unmistakably Constellation, but the 8922 gives it a mechanical credential that most dress watches in this category cannot match. For someone who wants a calendar watch they can actually set and forget, this is a better daily companion than a perpetual.
Omega introduced the Globemaster line in 2015, reviving the Constellation name's original Fifties identity with fluted bezels and pie-pan dials after years of the rounded "claw" case design. The annual calendar variant arrived in 2016 with the caliber 8922, itself a METAS-certified movement based on the 8900 family with an added annual calendar module. The ceramic bezel on this reference replaced earlier aluminium options and holds up significantly better to scratches in daily wear.
No major movement revisions have shipped since introduction; Omega has kept this reference relatively stable while rotating dial colors and bracelet options. The blue dial version (06 in the reference) has been the volume seller, with some limited lacquer and sector-style dials appearing in smaller numbers.
Inspect the ceramic bezel for chips at the edges, particularly near the 12 o'clock lug where it contacts straps during changes; ceramic does not scratch but it can crack. The Constellation bracelet on this generation uses a butterfly clasp that can develop lateral slop after a few years, so test it in person before buying used. Check the annual calendar date disc alignment through a loupe; if the previous owner forced the corrector in the wrong direction of crown rotation, the date wheel teeth can strip.
The pie-pan dial is applied over a recessed chapter ring, and any moisture ingress shows first as fogging in that ring channel, so examine under good lighting. METAS certification means the movement was tested to resist magnetic fields to 15,000 gauss, but prior exposure to strong magnets can still cause rate variance; ask for a recent timing slip if available.
Pre-owned 130.33.41.22.06.001 examples in steel on bracelet trade in the $4,000 to $5,500 range depending on box-and-papers and bracelet condition. The blue dial variant is plentiful enough that condition drives price more than scarcity. Sector-dial and champagne-dial examples fetch modest premiums over blue, typically 10 to 15 percent.
New old stock with full set and an intact METAS certificate commands the top of that range; stripped examples or those missing the inner box sell closer to movement value.
The caliber 8922 carries Omega's recommended service interval of 8 to 10 years, longer than the industry average because the co-axial escapement runs with minimal lubrication requirements. Omega boutique service for a full movement overhaul with annual calendar module runs approximately $800 to $1,200 depending on parts; independent watchmakers familiar with the 8900 family can service the base movement but the calendar module often requires Omega-sourced components. The METAS certification is not automatically re-issued after third-party service, so buyers who want the original certification reinstated should plan for Omega-authorized service.
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The Globemaster Annual Calendar has a specific reference number distinguishing it from the non-calendar Globemaster; verify the reference before purchase and confirm METAS caseback certification.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Pie-pan dial form | Raised hour indices on a domed dial surface with a stepped edge, correct to the Globemaster design | Flat dial surface; raised indices on an otherwise flat dial rather than a true pie-pan dome |
| caseback | METAS certification and reference number | METAS logo present, reference number matching Annual Calendar specification | No METAS stamp; reference number matching non-calendar Globemaster variant |
| dial | Annual calendar apertures |
| Day, date, and month apertures all present and correctly sized for the dial layout |
| Missing month aperture (non-calendar variant); apertures with incorrect font or misaligned windows |