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The Runabout is Frederique Constant's most visually distinctive sport watch, built around a dial pattern that mimics the teak planking of classic motorboats. At 42mm in steel with 50m water resistance, it reads as a leisure sport watch rather than a dive or field piece. If you find the Classics line too conservative, this is FC's answer.
Frederique Constant launched the Runabout in 2010 as an homage to the golden age of mahogany-hulled runabout boats, a distinctly European leisure tradition. The line was repositioned and refined in 2015 with the introduction of the FC-303 in-house movement, which marked a genuine step forward for the brand's manufacturing story. FC developed the Calibre FC-303 to demonstrate that the Geneva-based independent could produce reliable in-house automatics without the price premiums of the established Swiss houses.
The Runabout benefits from that investment: buyers get a branded movement with a 38-hour power reserve at a price point well below most Swiss sport watches with comparable finishing. Production continues today with minor dial and strap variations, though the core design has remained stable since 2015.
The teak-pattern dial is polarizing. It photographs well but in person some buyers find the texture busy rather than refined, and preferences here are genuinely personal. Confirm your read on the dial before buying.
The 50m water resistance is adequate for rain and splash but not for serious swimming or any diving; the Runabout is leisure-rated, not sport-rated by modern standards. Secondary market prices can vary sharply depending on whether the bracelet or the leather/rubber strap is included, so verify what comes with the watch before pricing a deal. FC's in-house movements are competent but not extensively serviced outside the brand's own network, which can complicate finding an independent watchmaker familiar with the FC-303 specifically.
New retail runs roughly $1,200 to $1,500 depending on retailer and configuration. On the secondary market, clean examples with box and papers trade between $700 and $950, making this one of the more reasonable entry points for a genuine in-house automatic with a distinctive design. Demand is stable but not strong, so buyers are not competing for examples and can afford to be patient for the right condition.
The Runabout runs the Frederique Constant Calibre FC-303, an in-house automatic with a 38-hour power reserve. Service intervals are typically every five to seven years under normal use. FC's authorized service centers handle the movement; independent watchmakers with experience in ETA-based movements will generally be comfortable with the FC-303 as well, since its architecture draws on established Swiss finishing practices.
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Verify the Cal. FC-303 in-house architecture through the exhibition caseback; boat steering wheel seconds hand is the dial signature.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | FC-303 in-house architecture | FC-303 in-house movement visible through exhibition caseback; distinct FC bridge layout | ETA or Sellita architecture; non-genuine movement |
| dial | Boat steering wheel seconds hand | Boat steering wheel motif on the seconds hand; correct nautical dial design | Standard seconds hand without the steering wheel motif; wrong or replacement dial |
| case | Runabout case finish | Correct case finish and proportions for the 42mm Runabout reference | Case finish inconsistency or incorrect proportions |