Editorial
The SRP777 is the blue-dial Turtle that spent years as the default answer whenever someone asked for an honest sub-$400 diver. The barrel-shaped case is unmistakable, the 200m rating is genuine, and Seiko built it to be worn, not babied.
Seiko revived the Turtle name in 2016, drawing directly from the 6309 diver that ran from 1976 through the 1980s. That original earned its nickname from the distinctive cushion case, wide lugs, and rounded profile that reads wider than its depth suggests. The SRP777J1 arrived as a J-spec variant, assembled in Japan rather than on the overseas lines, and the blue dial quickly made it the most-recommended model in the line.
It filled a genuine gap: a full-size professional diver with a pedigree case shape, sold new at a price where scratching it during a beach trip is not a tragedy.
The 4R36 movement hacks but does not hand-wind, which is a real limitation if you like setting the watch precisely before putting it on. Accuracy runs around plus-or-minus 15 seconds per day, sometimes worse on weaker specimens; budget for a regulation or buy from a seller who has measured it. The case at 45mm with the cushion geometry wears larger than the lug-to-lug suggests, and short wrists under about 17cm will struggle with fit.
Lume on the dial and hands is solid, but the chapter ring lume plots are small and dim compared to tool divers at higher price points. Finally, the bracelet on earlier production runs is thin and rattly; a rubber or NATO strap is the correct immediate upgrade.