
The Overseas Chronograph 5500V combines in-house flyback chronograph with the interchangeable strap system; secondary prices are supported by the complete package and the relative scarcity of steel sport chronographs at this quality level.
The 5500V is Vacheron's most capable everyday sport watch, packaging a genuine integrated flyback chronograph into the Overseas case at a price point that undercuts most of its Swiss competitors. Forty-two and a half millimeters is large but wears well on the integrated bracelet, and the interchangeable strap system means one watch can cover a board meeting and a weekend without feeling wrong. If you want a serious chronograph from a top-tier manufacture and refuse to pay Patek Nautilus money, this is the honest answer.
Vacheron launched the current-generation Overseas in 2016, and the chronograph variant arrived with it, replacing the earlier 5500V references powered by a different base caliber. The 5200 movement is built on a modified base shared with Patek's CH 29-535 PS via the Stern family's Patek-Le Coultre-Vacheron supply relationships, though Vacheron rates and finishes it independently. Flyback function, column wheel, and a 65-hour power reserve put the 5200 firmly in the top tier of manufacture chronograph calibers.
The current reference catalog spans steel (5500V/110A), 18k rose gold, and two-tone variations, with dial colors rotating periodically; steel blue is the signature configuration. The 2016 generation also introduced the interchangeable bracelet/rubber/leather strap system that has since become a calling card for the entire Overseas line.
Check the pushers carefully: the flyback and reset functions see hard use on pre-owned examples, and a sticky or sluggish pusher usually means the chronograph mechanism needs attention before you own it. Confirm the complete strap set travels with the watch; the rubber sport strap and leather dress strap each retail for several hundred dollars separately and are frequently missing from grey-market sales. On steel examples, inspect the bracelet center links and clasp for stretch, since the integrated bracelet has tight tolerances and worn links affect wrist feel noticeably.
Dial printing on the subdials fades unevenly on heavily worn examples, particularly around the running seconds at 9 o'clock, so examine under good light. Finally, verify service history: the 5200 caliber is not complicated to service but parts pricing through Vacheron is steep, so a watch that is overdue will cost you immediately after purchase.
Steel references trade at or slightly above retail at authorized dealers, and the secondary market has held up well because Vacheron consistently manages supply tightly. Blue dial steel is the baseline price; silver dial commands a modest premium due to scarcity. Rose gold examples trade at roughly 40 to 50 percent above steel on the secondary market, not dramatically more, which makes the gold versions quietly good value relative to competitors.
Two-tone configurations are the slowest movers and occasionally dip below their original retail, representing the best negotiating position for a buyer who likes the look.
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Counterfeit Overseas chronographs use ETA Valjoux 7750 movements; the caseback reveals the swap immediately.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Cal. 5200 movement architecture | Column-wheel vertical clutch visible; Maltese cross rotor; Geneva Seal finishing on all bridges; correct bridge layout for Cal. 5200 | ETA 7750 rotor and bridge layout; horizontal clutch architecture; absent Geneva Seal finishing |
| case | Pusher behavior at 2 and 4 | Start/stop pusher at 2 depresses cleanly; reset at 4 depresses cleanly; both return fully with discrete tactile feedback | Mushy or sticky pushers; pushers that do not return fully; incorrect pusher positions |
| movement | Vertical clutch start behavior | Chronograph seconds hand starts without jump when pusher is pressed; smooth engagement characteristic of vertical clutch |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
The caliber 5200 carries a recommended service interval of 10 years from Vacheron, and factory service pricing for the full chronograph overhaul runs roughly $2,500 to $3,500 USD depending on condition and parts required. Independent watchmakers with Swiss manufacture chronograph experience can service the movement for meaningfully less, but parts availability outside the Vacheron network is limited so choose your independent carefully. Budget for a gasket and pressure test at any service given the 150-meter water resistance rating, which is only worth trusting if the seals are fresh.
| Seconds hand jumps at chronograph start, indicating horizontal clutch (ETA 7750 behavior) |