Editorial
The Chronomaster Original 38mm is Zenith doing something rare in watchmaking: reproducing a movement without apology or modernization. The El Primero 400B beats at 36,000 vph because the original did, and that decision alone sets this watch apart from nearly every other vintage re-edition on the market.
In 1969, Zenith's Le Locle manufacture released the El Primero as one of the first automatic chronographs, and its 36,000 vph beat rate was a genuine technical distinction at a time when most chronograph movements ran at 28,800. The movement survived decades of ownership changes, including a period when Zenith engineers reportedly hid tooling to prevent the caliber from being discontinued. The Chronomaster Original, introduced in 2017, brings that history into the present with a 38mm case that matches the proportions of the 1969 reference rather than inflating them to modern taste.
The 400B inside is calibrated to the period-correct spec, with the tri-color subdial layout restored in a way that reads as historically honest rather than nostalgic cosplay.
The tri-color subdial configuration appeals to some buyers immediately and puts others off permanently; there is no neutral position on it, so handle the watch before committing. The 38mm case reads small on larger wrists, which is the point, but buyers expecting a modern 40mm+ wearing experience will be disappointed. Older examples from 2017 to 2019 occasionally surface with uneven lacquer on the subdials; examine dial condition closely on pre-owned pieces.
The 400B chronograph mechanism is a column-wheel design but the movement is complex relative to a simple three-hand watch, and service costs at authorized centers reflect that. Zenith has released several Chronomaster variants over the years (Original, Sport, Revival) and the naming can confuse casual buyers; confirm you have the Original 38mm with the 400B, not a related but different reference.