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The Clifton Club Commander Chronograph is Baume et Mercier's tactical-leaning sports piece, built around a 44mm steel case with a dark, purposeful aesthetic. It runs an ETA 7750, which is the expected workhorse at this tier, and it wears its military references without theatrical excess. For buyers who want a Swiss-made column-wheel chronograph with genuine brand heritage and no pretension, this is a solid candidate.
Baume et Mercier was founded in 1830 in Les Brenets, making it one of the older continuously operating Swiss maisons. The brand has historically occupied the accessible end of the luxury spectrum, competing on value and finish rather than in-house complications. The Clifton line launched in 2012 as a broad family spanning dress watches through sporty references.
The Commander Chronograph, introduced within that family around 2015, brought a darker palette and military-adjacent design language into the mix. It is a pragmatic piece from a house that has never positioned itself as a manufacture but delivers reliable Swiss movements at approachable prices.
At 44mm this is a large watch, and buyers with smaller wrists should try it on before committing. The ETA 7750 is robust but it runs at 28,800 bph with an automatic winding mechanism that can feel coarser than the smoother integrated chronograph movements found in higher-tier competitors. The dark dial and bezel look sharp in photos but can read as heavy on the wrist in person.
New retail pricing for the Commander Chronograph has historically been aggressive, which compresses resale value significantly; expect secondary-market prices well below original retail. Verify the chronograph function and pushers work cleanly on any pre-owned example, as the 7750's pusher seals and correctors can wear with use.
The Commander Chronograph retails in the $2,000 to $2,500 range new, and pre-owned examples regularly trade between $800 and $1,400 depending on condition and box-papers status. That secondary spread makes it one of the better value propositions in its category for a buyer who is not chasing appreciation. Demand is steady but not deep, so patience on the buy side is usually rewarded.
The ETA 7750 is one of the most widely serviced movements in the industry, with qualified watchmakers worldwide familiar with its layout and sourcing parts without difficulty. A full service including chronograph function inspection typically runs $300 to $500 at an independent watchmaker. Baume et Mercier boutique servicing is available but rarely necessary given how accessible independent service is for this caliber.
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The engraved caseback text must be deep and crisp; shallow engraving indicates an aftermarket or replacement caseback.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Caseback engraving depth | Deep, crisp "Baume & Mercier Geneve" engraving on caseback | Shallow engraving; aftermarket or replacement caseback |
| caseback | Valjoux 7750 movement | ETA/Valjoux 7750 visible through exhibition window; correct for Commander Chronograph | Non-7750 movement; movement swap |
| case | Pusher return | Both chronograph pushers return cleanly after depression | Sticky pushers; chronograph mechanism needs service |