
Live pricing is coming soon. Get notified when it is available for this reference.
The 36mm Divers Sixty-Five is the case size the original 1965 Oris actually wore, and for wrists under 17cm it fits where the 40mm crowds. Oris brought it back alongside the larger variant in 2018, giving buyers a proportionally faithful revival rather than a scaled-up homage to a smaller watch. If you care about wearing vintage proportions on a new movement, this is the ref to buy.
Oris introduced the Divers Sixty-Five collection in 2015 as a fiftieth-anniversary callback to its 1965 waterproof tool watch, initially in 40mm. The 36mm variant (reference 01 733 7747 4063) launched in 2018 with a steel bracelet and leather strap option, targeting collectors who recognized that the original was never a large watch. The caliber 733, a decorated Sellita SW200-1, runs at 28,800 vph with a 38-hour reserve and hacks.
Oris has kept the 36mm in continuous production since launch, cycling through dial colors including blue, green, and various fumé treatments. No major movement change has occurred in the ref; the 733 caliber has been consistent throughout.
The domed acrylic-style sapphire crystal scratches more readily than flat crystals and shows swirl marks on used examples; inspect under raking light before buying. The bezel insert on early production examples showed more pronounced fading at the lume pip; later units corrected this. The bracelet on the 36mm is narrower than the 40mm and has a different taper, so aftermarket bracelets are less abundant.
At 100m water resistance, the crown is not screw-down, so confirm the crown seals and threads properly on any pre-owned piece. The Sellita SW200-1 base is reliable but the rotor can develop a rattle if the movement has been knocked; shake the watch and listen before purchase.
New retail sits around $1,500 to $1,700 USD depending on configuration, with the steel bracelet version at the higher end. Pre-owned trades at a modest discount to retail, typically $1,100 to $1,350 in unworn or lightly worn condition, which is a fair spread for a current-production Sellita-based watch. Unusual dial colors, particularly the green fumé, carry a small premium of $100 to $200 on the secondary market.
There is no investment thesis here; this is a wear-it watch at an honest price.
The caliber 733 (Sellita SW200-1 base) carries a recommended service interval of five to seven years. Independent watchmakers familiar with Sellita movements can service this at roughly $200 to $350 USD, and parts availability is good given the SW200-1's widespread use. Oris factory service is an option but typically runs higher; for a watch at this price point, a reputable independent is the practical choice.
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 bidirectional bezel is period-correct and intentional; buyers expecting a modern safety bezel must know this.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | Bidirectional bezel | Bidirectional bezel operation; period-correct for 1960s dive watch design | Unidirectional bezel replaced the original bidirectional unit; incorrect for this reference |
| case | Cushion lug profile | Vintage-style cushion lug profile specific to Divers Sixty-Five design | Generic or non-cushion lug profile; does not match documented case shape |
| caseback | Cal. 733 designation | Oris Cal. 733; Sellita SW200-1 base with Oris finishing | Non-Oris caliber; incorrect caliber for this reference |