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The Black Bay 36 is the version of the Black Bay most faithful to the proportions of the 1958 Submariner reference that started the whole lineage. At 36mm it wears closer to a vintage diver than a modern sport watch, which is either exactly what you want or entirely beside the point. Buyers who find the BB41 too big and the BB58 still a touch large come here.
Tudor launched the Black Bay in 2012 at 41mm, then expanded the family with the 58mm lug-to-lug BB58 in 2018, but the 36mm arrived in 2016 as the most restrained member of the line. The proportions are deliberately period-correct: the case diameter and the relatively thin lugs track much closer to what Tudor was producing in the late 1950s than either of the larger variants. Tudor offered the BB36 both with and without a date window, giving buyers a choice that the other Black Bay sizes do not always provide.
The snowflake hands and pencil-style hands have both appeared across the range, connecting the watch visually to Tudor's vintage catalog without pretending to be a reissue.
The T600 movement is a modified ETA 2824-2, which is a perfectly competent caliber but not manufactured by Tudor. If you value in-house movements, this ref is the wrong answer in the Black Bay line; the BB58 and BB41 received the in-house MT5402 while the BB36 kept the outsourced base. Bracelet end-link fit on early production examples drew criticism, so inspect the bracelet carefully on pre-owned pieces for play or wear at the lugs.
The 36mm size is genuinely small on larger wrists, and the cushion-case geometry exaggerates perceived size inconsistently depending on lug-to-lug, so try it on before buying if size is a close call for you. Finally, the date variant adds a cyclops-free flat sapphire with no magnification, which some buyers find harder to read than expected.
The BB36 trades at a modest discount to the BB58 on the secondary market, reflecting the outsourced movement and smaller collector following rather than any quality deficiency. Grey market pricing often sits near or slightly below retail, making this one of the more accessible Tudor sport watches to acquire without a waitlist. The no-date configuration tends to hold value marginally better among buyers who prioritize the cleaner dial.
The T600 caliber is a modified ETA 2824-2 with a service interval Tudor recommends at approximately five years. Independent watchmakers who work on Swiss lever-escapement movements can service this caliber without difficulty, and parts availability is broad. Tudor's own service network is straightforward for this reference with no unusual complications.
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The snowflake handset with club-shaped tips is the defining Tudor historical element; Mercedes-style hands are the wrong specification.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| hands | Snowflake handset club-shaped tips | Distinctive flat club-shaped tips on hour and minute hands; the snowflake profile is a historical Tudor signature | Mercedes-style (open circle at tip) or simple baton hands indicating a hand swap to a non-BB36 specification |
| dial | No date aperture | Clean dial with no date aperture at any position; BB36 has no date complication | Date aperture present at 3 or 4 indicating a dial swap from a different Black Bay variant |
| caseback | Cal. T600 movement identity | Movement signed T600 and Tudor through the exhibition caseback |
| Unsigned ETA 2824-2 without Tudor finishing indicating a movement replacement |