Description
SEIKO vintage mechanical watch
MADE IN JAPAN
“Seiko” (精工) is a Japanese word meaning “precision,” “exquisite workmanship,” or “refined craftsmanship.”
It comes from the characters:
-
精 (sei) – fine, precise, refined
-
工 (ko) – craft, workmanship
Originally, Seiko’s watchmaking division was called Seikosha (精工舎), meaning “House of Precision.”
In 1924 the company shortened the name to Seiko, keeping the core meaning.
So the brand name literally ties directly to the idea of precision engineering—which is exactly what the company wanted to be known for in its watches.
About the Champion 860 Line
🕰️ The Seiko Champion Line (1962–1966)
The Seiko Champion debuted in the autumn of 1962 as one of Seikosha’s most ambitious mid-range offerings — a hand-wound dress watch engineered for the rapidly expanding Japanese salaryman class. It launched in two variants: the Champion (time-only) and the Champion Calendar (with date), both powered by new Seikosha calibers designated the 850 and 860 series respectively. By 1963, that naming would give way to the familiar four-digit caliber system used across all Seiko lines.
The Champion 860 was built for everyday elegance: a slim stainless-steel case with a smooth, polished bezel; a clean silver sunburst dial with applied baton indices; and a distinctive framed date window at 3 o’clock. The Diashock shock-protection system — Seiko’s proprietary alternative to the Swiss Incabloc — kept the movement safe during daily wear. A clever “quick-set” date feature, activated by cycling the hands through the 9 PM–midnight zone, was considered a genuine convenience in an era when most date watches required tedious crown manipulation.
Produced exclusively for the Japanese Domestic Market (JDM), the Champion line was never officially exported. Today, examples that have survived in good condition are genuinely uncommon outside Japan — they had to leave the country through personal travel, military postings, or later collector channels.
About This Watch
This is a Seiko Champion 860, reference 7622-9010, its case-back serial number (6208183) dating production to February 1966 — near the end of the Champion line’s brief 1962–1966 run. The dial is a deep gray sunburst that shades from near-black at the rim to a lighter gunmetal toward the center as it catches the light, with applied faceted baton indices and a framed date window at 3 o’clock.
Powering it is the Seikosha-signed caliber 7622A: a hand-wound movement with 17 jewels beating at 18,000 bph, protected by Seiko’s Diashock shock-protection system. The Champion’s restrained layout — a slim polished-bezel case and a dial with nothing on it beyond what the eye needs — is exactly the understated dress-watch formula Seiko built the line around.
It comes on its original Seiko-signed stainless-steel bracelet, the clasp clearly stamped SEIKO, so the watch presents today much as a Japanese professional would have worn it in the mid-1960s.
Technical Specifications
- Brand: Seiko
- Line: Champion 860
- Reference Number: 7622-9010 (case-back)
- Movement: Caliber 7622A, hand-wound, 17 jewels, 18,000 bph, Diashock
- Serial Number: 6208183
- Production Date: February 1966
- Case Material: Stainless steel
- Case Diameter: ~36 mm (without crown)
- Dial: Gray sunburst with applied faceted baton indices, framed date at 3
- Crystal: Acrylic (Hesalite)
- Case-back: Snap-on, seahorse medallion, “WATER PROOF”, S/S
- Country of Manufacture: Japan
Condition Report
The gray sunburst dial is clean and original, its sunburst radiance strong under light, with bright applied indices and hands and a clearly printed date wheel — no signs of refinishing. The stainless-steel case holds its shape with only light surface wear and fine hairlines consistent with age, and the polished bezel still catches the light well. The acrylic crystal is clear. The original Seiko-signed bracelet is complete and comfortably wearable, showing honest wear across the links and clasp. Overall a well-preserved, natural example that wears its nearly sixty years gracefully.

Watch went through a recent service by a professional watch technician and keeps good time.
Comes complete with original steel bracelet*.
(*)Note: Stock bracelets are often shortened by previous owners and may not fit you(see bracelet size in the product images). We recommend adding a new Seiko lug width matched leather strap with your order.

This watch ships from 🇺🇦Ukraine with tracking number

Why Collectors Want This Watch Today
The Champion was a Japanese-domestic-market line that Seiko never officially exported, and its short 1962–1966 production window means clean examples surface far less often outside Japan than the company’s later, globally sold models. The appeal here isn’t scarcity for its own sake but value: a Seikosha-signed hand-wound movement, an honest sunburst dial, and genuine 1960s dress-watch proportions, still trading well below comparable Swiss watches of the same era. A gray-dialed example on its original signed bracelet, running well after a professional service, is a vintage Seiko you can comfortably wear every day.

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Seiko lug width matched leather straps: 18mm - 19mm - 20mm

About the watch factory

Seiko Group Corporation (セイコーグループ株式会社, Seikō Gurūpu kabushiki gaisha), commonly known as Seiko, is a Japanese maker of watches, clocks, electronic devices, and semiconductors. Founded in 1881 by Kintarō Hattori in Tokyo, Seiko introduced the world’s first commercial quartz wristwatch in 1969.
Seiko is widely known for its wristwatches. Seiko and Rolex are the only two watch companies considered to be vertically integrated. Seiko is able to design and develop all the components of a watch, as well as assemble, adjust, inspect and ship them in-house. Seiko’s mechanical watches consist of approximately 200 parts, and the company has the technology and production facilities to design and manufacture all of these parts internally.
Seiko offers one of the widest ranges of watch technologies in the world—quartz, kinetic, solar, mechanical, and Spring Drive—spanning everything from affordable everyday pieces to six-figure haute horlogerie. Over the decades it has launched multiple global brands, including Lorus, Pulsar, and Alba, while elevating its prestige through innovations like Spring Drive, which helped push Seiko into higher-end territory. In the 2010s, Grand Seiko and Credor were separated into fully independent luxury brands, while Seiko’s own global lineup now includes Grand Seiko, King Seiko, Prospex, Astron, Presage, and Seiko 5 Sports, with Credor remaining primarily Japan-focused.
Among Seiko’s key lines, Seiko 5 (born in 1963) is the gateway mechanical series known for durability and value; Lord Matic defined 1970s style with faceted crystals and colorful dials; Astron remains Seiko’s flagship GPS-solar tech line; Presage focuses on traditional mechanical craftsmanship with enamel and urushi dials; and Prospex delivers professional-grade dive, field, and pilot watches often embraced by enthusiasts. At the top end, Grand Seiko emphasizes precision, Zaratsu polished design, and movements like Spring Drive, while King Seiko—revived in the 2020s—brings back sharp, elegant 1960s styling with modern calibres.
Finally, Credor represents Seiko’s pinnacle of artisanal watchmaking, producing low-volume pieces in precious metals and showcasing Japanese decorative arts and haute complications from the Micro Artist Studio. Beyond watches, Seiko has also produced various electronic devices and, historically, jewelry and eyewear—though those divisions have since shifted to other companies.




















