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The Marine Star Automatic is what $400 buys you in a credible dive watch: a Bulova in-house BVL 215 movement (not a rebadged ETA), a ceramic bezel insert, 200m water resistance, and a case proportioned for the sport category. It is not a Submariner. It is a genuinely capable automatic sport watch at a price where most competitors are selling quartz or unreliable movements. That is the honest case for it.
Bulova revitalized its movement program in the 2010s, developing the BVL caliber family in-house to replace third-party movements across the lineup. The Marine Star automatic uses the BVL 215, a 21-jewel caliber with a 42-hour power reserve that Bulova built for the mid-tier sport market. The 43mm ceramic bezel case is purpose-designed for the dive category rather than a sport case with a bezel bolted on.
Bulova has been making American-market watches since 1875; the Marine Star is the modern expression of the brand's sport orientation.
The BVL 215 is a solid movement but parts availability outside the Bulova service network is not as deep as for ETA or Sellita calibers; if the movement needs work, routing it through Bulova service or an authorized repair center is the safer choice than an independent. At 43mm and 13mm thick this is a full-size sport watch that can feel large on a 6.5-inch wrist. Ceramic bezels resist scratching well but can chip at the edges under hard impact; inspect closely on any used example.
The Marine Star 98A302 retails in the $350 to $450 range at major US retailers. It competes directly with Seiko's 5 Sports automatic line, Orient Mako variants, and entry-level Hamilton Khaki Navy pieces. New is almost always the right buy at this price tier: used examples rarely trade at enough of a discount to justify the condition uncertainty, and the retail price is genuinely accessible.
Bulova occasionally discounts through department-store channels, so buying below MSRP is realistic.
Bulova recommends service approximately every three years for water-resistant models used in the water, which is aggressive compared to the collector standard; five years is more realistic for a watch worn but not regularly submerged. Service through Bulova's network is cost-effective relative to the watch's value; at this price tier a service that costs more than 30% of retail value deserves a hard look at whether a replacement is more sensible.
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The Miyota 8215 is Japanese origin, not Swiss; this is correct and genuine for the Marine Star, and buyers should know what they are getting.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| movement | Miyota 8215 movement architecture | Miyota 8215 movement layout visible through caseback; Japanese architecture is correct for Marine Star | Non-Miyota movement in a Marine Star case; non-genuine movement swap |
| case | Rotating bezel engagement | Rotating bezel clicks positively at each index position | Loose bezel with no positive engagement; worn or damaged bezel mechanism |
| dial | Marine Star dial text | "MARINE STAR" and 200m designation on dial | Missing model text or incorrect depth rating; wrong reference or non-genuine dial |