Editorial
The Black Bay 41 is the Tudor most buyers end up with, and for good reason. Correct dive watch proportions, in-house movement, 200m water resistance, and a price that leaves room in the budget for a strap collection. If the Submariner is the benchmark, the BB41 is the honest answer.
Tudor relaunched the Black Bay in 2012 as a direct nod to its own dive watch heritage from the 1950s and 1960s, drawing on the broad crown-guards and domed crystal of those original references. The 41mm case arrived in 2017, settling the size debate that had followed the original 41mm launch and replacing the ETA movement with Tudor's own MT5602. The MT5602 shares its base architecture with Rolex's caliber 3135 and carries a 70-hour power reserve, which is serious engineering for the price point.
Snowflake and dagger hand variants have coexisted across the lineup, giving buyers a meaningful choice without fragmenting the core reference. The M79230N is the steel case on leather or fabric strap, the purist configuration before you get into bracelet or bronze territory.
The BB41 market is liquid enough that pre-owned prices cluster tightly, so paying full retail is rarely necessary. Watch the dial condition carefully on older examples: the applied Tudor rose logo can show wear at the base where it meets the dial, which is cosmetic but worth negotiating on. Bracelets on earlier production runs had noticeable play at the clasp; if the watch comes on a bracelet, check that before buying.
Some buyers find the domed crystal scratches more readily than a flat sapphire, so ask about the crystal condition specifically. Tudor's warranty transfers with proof of purchase, but the secondary market frequently moves watches without paperwork, so price accordingly if box and papers are absent.