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The WAR201C is the honest entry point to the Carrera case: 41mm of clean steel, a date at three, and nothing else in the way. TAG Heuer built it for buyers who want the Carrera shape without the price of the Heuer 02 or the Calibre 16. It does exactly what it promises and competes on looks, not on movement credentials.
The Carrera name goes back to Jack Heuer's 1963 racing chronograph, but the Calibre 5 three-hander is a much later addition to the family, arriving as a lower-cost gateway into the line. TAG Heuer introduced it to sit below the in-house movement variants and to give the Carrera case broader market reach. The WAR201C in steel with black dial has been the steady seller in that role since 2015.
It shares a case architecture with the rest of the modern Carrera range but diverges sharply on movement: where the Calibre 16 and Heuer 02 are column-wheel chronographs, the Calibre 5 is a straightforward time-and-date watch built on the Sellita SW200. The name "Calibre 5" is a TAG Heuer designation, not a proprietary movement.
The Sellita SW200 inside is a solid, well-supported Swiss lever movement, but buyers should know it is not a COSC-certified movement in this application and is not manufactured by TAG Heuer. At retail, the WAR201C has historically been priced close to watches with better finishing or stronger in-house stories, so the value case depends almost entirely on buying used or on sale. The 41mm case wears well, but the lug-to-lug is on the longer side and some wrists find it uncomfortable.
Crown and pushpiece finish on production examples is sometimes inconsistent, with light toolmarks visible under magnification. Resale value is soft: the secondary market treats the Calibre 5 Carrera as a fashion-adjacent piece, not a collector reference, so expect meaningful depreciation from retail.
Used WAR201C examples trade in the $800 to $1,200 range depending on condition and box-and-papers, which puts them in direct competition with the Longines Master Collection and Tissot Le Locle on specification. At those prices the value is reasonable if you specifically want the Carrera case; if the movement is your priority, the Longines offers better finishing for similar money. Strong discounts from authorized dealers are common on new stock, so check grey-market pricing before buying used.
The Sellita SW200 is one of the most widely serviced Swiss movements in the world, and any qualified watchmaker can handle a full service without factory tooling. TAG Heuer service centers will service the watch, but independent shops familiar with the SW200 are a cost-effective alternative. A standard service interval of five to seven years applies; parts availability is not a concern.
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Confirm no chronograph pushers; three-register layout without chrono distinguishes this from chrono variants.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | Pusher absence | No pusher apertures at 2 or 4 o'clock positions; smooth case flanks | Any pusher holes or plugged apertures indicating a different reference or modification |
| dial | Non-chrono dial layout | Three-hand plus date layout; no sub-registers for chronograph functions | Sub-registers present; dial layout inconsistent with Carrera Date specification |
| caseback | Caliber 5 identity | TAG Cal. 5 designation; Sellita SW200-1 architecture | Incorrect caliber; chronograph movement installed in non-chrono case |