The reissued Turtle retails for around $350 and used examples stay close to that; the rounded case is popular with divers who want Japanese quartz-standard accuracy in a mechanical package.
The SRPE93 is Seiko's Save the Ocean take on the Turtle, a 45mm barrel-shaped diver built for actual water use at a price that doesn't sting. The blue-to-teal gradient dial is legitimately attractive rather than a marketing afterthought, and the limited production runs make secondhand availability spottier than the standard Turtle lineup. If you want a big, capable, good-looking diver under $400, this is a serious contender.
The Turtle name traces back to Seiko's 1975 ref. 6309, a squat barrel-cased diver that collectors nicknamed for its rounded profile. Seiko revived the shape in 2015 under the Prospex umbrella, updating it with modern movements while keeping the original's chunky proportions intact. The Save the Ocean series launched as a collaboration with ocean conservation efforts, directing a portion of proceeds toward marine causes.
The SRPE93 arrived around 2020 as part of that series, with production volumes lower than the standard blue or black Turtle variants. It sits at the entry tier of the Prospex diver lineup, above the SKX-replacement SNKEs but below the SLA and Marine Master lines.
The 4R36 movement runs at 21,600 vph and delivers only middling accuracy in practice, typically +15/-5 seconds per day at best out of the box. That rate is acceptable for a tool watch but disappointing if you expect the precision some rivals offer at similar prices. The 45mm case is genuinely large and the lug-to-lug spread is substantial; buyers who haven't worn this size before should handle one first.
Save the Ocean references carry a modest secondary market premium over standard Turtles, but that premium fluctuates and evaporates quickly if condition is anything less than excellent. Dial color shifts noticeably between photos online and in-hand lighting, so don't buy secondhand without recent seller photos in natural light.
New SRPE93 units fetch roughly $300 to $380 at authorized dealers when stock is available, but scarcity pushes gray market pricing higher on some variants. Used examples in excellent condition typically trade at $220 to $300, which puts them squarely against the Orient Mako and Citizen Promaster at a higher price. The Save the Ocean colorway does hold slightly better than the basic Turtle over time, though it is not a strong investment thesis.
The 4R36 automatic is a workhorse caliber with a long service history and widespread watchmaker familiarity. Seiko recommends service every three to five years for diver use; a standard clean-oil-regulate service runs $150 to $250 at most independent watchmakers. Gasket replacement is worth doing at each service if you plan to dive with it, since the 200m rating depends on seals that age regardless of use.
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 Save the Ocean dial coloring is reference-specific; any standard blue or black dial on a Turtle body is a different reference, not a genuine SRPE93.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Save the Ocean dial coloring and motif | Blue-green gradient with ocean-themed imagery specific to the Save the Ocean edition | Standard blue or black dial without the Save the Ocean motif; wrong reference |
| movement | Cal. 4R36 identification through caseback | Cal. 4R36 with 21,600bph rotor, 41h reserve is correct for SRPE93 | Cal. 6R35 rotor visible; movement has been upgraded or watch is misrepresented |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.