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The Formula 1 Calibre 5 Date is TAG Heuer's honest answer to the question of what you get for entry money: a 43mm steel sport watch with 200m water resistance, a legitimate automatic movement, and the TAG name on the dial. It sits below the Carrera and Monaco in every meaningful way, and it does not pretend otherwise. For what it is, the value proposition is real.
TAG Heuer launched the Formula 1 line in 1986 as a purpose-built entry tier, capitalizing on the brand's Formula 1 sponsorship relationships at a price point well below the Carrera heritage pieces. Early references used quartz movements; the shift to automatic options like the Calibre 5 came later as the line matured and the market rewarded mechanical specs at accessible prices. The WAZ2010 generation, introduced in 2020, standardized the 43mm case and brought the date window into the line.
The Formula 1 has never been a collector's grail, but it has always served as a functional gateway into TAG's catalog for buyers not yet ready to commit to a Carrera-tier price. That positioning has kept it relevant in a segment where Seiko and Tissot compete hard on movement quality and finishing.
The Calibre 5 designation sounds proprietary but the movement inside is the Sellita SW200, an ETA 2824 clone. That is a competent and serviceable movement, but buyers should know they are not getting in-house manufacture at this price. The 43mm case runs large on smaller wrists and the integrated bracelet design on some configurations can feel chunky compared to the Carrera's more refined proportions.
Lume application on the WAZ2010 is adequate for casual use but falls short of the Seiko Prospex standard at similar price points. The bracelet clasp on entry-tier examples is functional but not satisfying, and aftermarket replacement is worth budgeting for if wrist comfort matters. Resale on the Formula 1 line is soft relative to other TAG references; this is a watch to buy because you want to wear it, not hold it.
New examples of the WAZ2010.BA0842 retail in the $1,400 to $1,600 range. Pre-owned pricing settles meaningfully lower, often in the $800 to $1,100 range for clean examples with original bracelet. At that price, it competes directly with the Tissot Seastar 1000 and mid-tier Seiko Prospex offerings, both of which offer stronger movement transparency and in some cases better finishing for the money.
The TAG name carries weight in certain contexts, but in this price band that premium is narrow.
The Sellita SW200 inside the Calibre 5 is widely serviced and parts are readily available through any competent independent watchmaker. Recommended service interval is every 5 to 7 years under normal use. TAG Heuer authorized service centers will service this reference, though independent shops familiar with SW200-based movements can do the same work at lower cost.
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.
Aluminum tachymeter bezel scratches easily; inspect for dents or pry marks at the bezel edge.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | Aluminum bezel condition | Aluminum tachymeter bezel with legible scale; light surface scratches acceptable; no dents or pry damage | Deep dents in aluminum; pry marks at bezel edge indicating attempted removal; tachymeter scale worn beyond legibility |
| caseback | Caliber 5 identity | TAG Cal. 5 designation; Sellita SW200-1 architecture | Incorrect caliber designation; quartz movement in automatic case |
| dial | Formula 1 typography | TAG Heuer and Formula 1 text correct per WAZ2010 specification; indices aligned | Incorrect text; misaligned indices; dial showing delamination or moisture damage |