Traska · Summiteer

Summiteer

Mid-range $600–900

The Traska Summiteer is a no-date automatic field watch offered in 36mm and 38mm hardened 316L stainless steel cases, powered by the Miyota 9039 and finished with a box sapphire crystal. Drawing on mid-20th-century military field watch aesthetics — 3-6-9 Arabic numeral layout, raised lume indices, sword hands — it is sold direct-to-consumer by the Singapore-based microbrand at $690–$700.

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38mm

Case

100m

Water res.

10.6mm

Thick

45.6mm

Lug-to-lug

Overview

Brand Traska
Reference 2196
Collection Summiteer
Category Field
Released 2019
Price guide Mid-range · $600–900

Full specification

Specs

Case & dial

Diameter 38 mm
Lug-to-lug 45.6 mm
Thickness 10.6 mm
Lug width 20 mm
Water resistance 100 m
Crystal sapphire, box double-dome with AR coating
Case material 316L stainless steel (hardened to ~1200HV)
Bezel fixed
Case back solid

Movement & furniture

Type Automatic
Caliber Miyota 9039 →
Power reserve 42 h
Jewels 24
Lume Swiss BGW9 Grade A Super-LumiNova
Strap / bracelet steel bracelet

Bottom line

A genuinely well-finished no-date field watch for under $700 that earns its Explorer-inspired reputation through real build quality — hardened case, articulated bracelet, and BGW9 lume — rather than marketing alone.

Highlights

  • No-date Miyota 9039
  • Hardened 316L steel (~1200HV)
  • Box sapphire crystal
  • Swiss BGW9 Grade A lume
  • 38mm / 45.6mm lug-to-lug

Who it's for

Best suited to buyers with 6.5–7" wrists who want a slim, versatile field watch with a clean no-date dial and robust daily-wear credentials. The 36mm variant (44mm lug-to-lug) accommodates smaller wrists without compromise. The brushed/polished finishing and neutral dial colours make it equally appropriate for casual outdoor use and office wear.

Who should skip it

Skip it if you need a date complication, want more than 100m water resistance, require an in-house or COSC-certified movement, or are put off by the obvious Rolex Explorer design lineage.

Before you buy

  • Confirm size: 36mm (Ref. 6224, $690) vs 38mm (Ref. 2196, $700) — dimensions differ meaningfully
  • Check stock status — Traska sells in limited runs and both sizes show sold-out periodically
  • Verify generation: V1–V6 span 2019–present with changes to crystal, lume, crown, and bracelet
  • No date window — intentional design choice, not an omission to overlook

FAQ

Is the Summiteer automatic or quartz?

It runs a automatic movement.

What movement does the Summiteer use?

The Miyota 9039 (Miyota).

Does the Summiteer have a date?

No.

How water resistant is the Summiteer?

It is rated to 100 m.

How big does the Summiteer wear?

38 mm wide with a 45.6 mm lug-to-lug.

How does the Summiteer compare to a Rolex Explorer I?

At roughly one-tenth the price, the Summiteer shares the Explorer's 3-6-9 no-date layout and utilitarian ethos. Case finishing and bracelet quality are genuinely impressive for the price bracket, but the Miyota 9039 cannot match the COSC-certified Calibre 3230 in accuracy or serviceability heritage, and Rolex's brand equity and resale value are entirely absent.

How has the design evolved across versions?

Six generations from 2019 to the current V6 (Ref. 2196 / 6224). Key upgrades: screw-down crown added in V2, slimmer box crystal in V4 (reducing total thickness by ~0.65mm), hand-applied 3D BGW9 lume indices in V4, and a quick-release bracelet with micro-adjustable on-the-fly clasp in V6.

Is the hardened case coating meaningful, or just marketing?

The proprietary treatment genuinely raises surface hardness to roughly 1,200 HV versus ~200 HV for untreated 316L — comparable to PVD coatings used on tool watches — which does resist everyday scratches noticeably better than standard steel. The treatment covers the entire case and bracelet.

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