Corvus Bradley
Testament To Classic Design and Restraint

The Bradley watch from newcomer Corvus is a tool watch, straight up. Adhering to 1950’s military dive watch specs, Corvus’ founding brothers Cam and Tom worked diligently to create a watch worthy of the man they named it after General Omar Bradley. We think they more than succeeded. Click through for more.
Drawing from a rare Bulova dive watch prototype and the Tornek-Rayville TR 900, the Bradley is meant to be a military grade watch. With the originals being issued to Force Recon Marines and Navy Seals during Vietnam, that was a tall order. Cam and Tom worked with reknowed case manufacterer Fricker to bring their design to life (to see more of that process check out their blog.) The case they developed is not some off the shelf model that’s been retasked, it’s custom specifically to the Bradley and machined in Germany by Fricker. Going a step further, the Corvus guys wanted to make the case as durable as possible as settled on a process known as Klosterizing, which brings the 316L SS to a hardness of 1076 HV.
he proceeded to pick up a steak knife and without a word proceeded to saw at the Bradley for a while… not a scratch to be seen on the watch
Over dinner, when I asked Cam how well the Klosterizing worked, he proceeded to pick up a steak knife and without a word proceeded to saw at the Bradley for a while… not a scratch to be seen on the watch, but the knife was a lot duller. The watch dial is painted with Satellite Black paint for the darkest possible face, in person it’s so black it looks like a void with floating indices. The bezel is the 60 click undirectional type you need for diving with cool “stealth lume” on the first 15 minutes, and it’s water resistant to 300m/1000ft. For guts, the Bradley has the well known ETA 2824-2, which though not the finest ETA movement it’s considered to be the most robust, what you need in a military watch.

Cam and Tom want their customers to get not only a watch when they buy a Corvus, but a feel for the history connected to it. The packaging of the Bradley looks like that of a issued watch, plain cardboard with shredded packing, and a pamphlet detailing the background of the watch. They each come with a deadstock Tropic Rubber strap, and a “Real Bond” NATO strap. Keep your eyes peeled for a reproduction t-shirt about “the friendly skies of Vietnam.”
Corvus created a dive and field watch that’s a testament to classic design and restraint coupled with modern technology. It won’t be the flashiest or most well known time piece you could get for $1,300, but it will be the most rugged. Seriously a steak knife? That’s just BA.
Cost: $1,300


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I like the sound of the robust quality of this watch… the Klosterizing process sounds rad. I'm a sucker for those coin edge bezels and a watch with a bit of history too you know. I'd drop 1300 on this one for sure. Thanks for the heads up.
Glad you like it Rog. Watching him destroy a steak knife on the watch was incredible. It is my ideal everyday watch. It's a very impressive watch in person, simplicity well executed. Let me know if you get one.
Cheers,
Jon
Thanks Jon, will do. A Bradley is certainly on my list. Speaking of which I just checked the Corvus website and was very interested to see that Bond, in the film Goldfinger I think, wore his Rolex with the Bond Nato strap you mention above in a size too small for his watch– I mean, with an 18mm strap instead of a 20mm strap. I noticed in the photo of his watch on the Corvus site that you can see the metal bar thing at the side of the strap cos the strap's too skinny, and then when I read it was intentional I thought… cool. I'm wondering now: is it some kind of trend or something to wear a Nato strap that's a little skinny? I'm intrigued…
R
RogD,
From what I've read the reason Connery wore that undersized strap was because they borrowed it from another watch, and it happened to be too small. Apparently it wasn't an intentional choice. My daily wearer Hamilton (the watch in the ACE Hotel pics), came with a 16mm strap with 18mm lugs, I found it annoying. I do have a couple of the Real Bond straps from Corvus and I really like them, very comfortable and a cool color combo.
-Jon
So glad I clicked on to the link - been looking for a nylon strap with a piped in stripe for my hamilton Khaki Field Officer Automatic in a 22mm lug width - I think this may do the trick, and the price seems reasonable.
interesting history. I like the emphasis on the utility and function.