Editorial
The Ray III is Orient's clearest argument that serious dive tool watches don't require a Japanese conglomerate's marketing budget. At 43mm with 200m water resistance and an in-house automatic movement, it competes squarely with the Seiko Turtle and SKX on spec and undercuts them on price. Buy one and you get a watch Orient actually made, not assembled from outsourced parts.
Orient has made divers under various names since the 1960s, but the Ray line consolidated the brand's sport identity in the modern era. The Ray III arrived in 2019 as a refinement of the Ray II, sharpening the case finishing and improving the bezel action while keeping the same fundamental layout. The RA-AA0006L19A in blue is the variant that gets the most attention, though the lineup spans several dial colors.
Orient is a subsidiary of Seiko Epson but operates its own movement manufacturing, which puts it in a genuinely rare category for watches at this price tier.
The 43mm diameter reads larger on the wrist than the number suggests because the case is also fairly thick; buyers who haven't tried it in person sometimes find it more substantial than expected. The bracelet on the stock configuration is functional but not impressive, with noticeable play at the links and a clasp that feels lightweight relative to the case. Lume application on the dial plots is good, but the bezel pip lume is minimal and fades quickly.
Water resistance is rated at 200m, though the screw-down crown is only one layer of protection; verify the crown is fully seated before any serious water exposure. The movement hand-winds but does not hack, which is a minor inconvenience for precision time-setting.