Editorial
The Marine Torpilleur is Ulysse Nardin's cleanest case for why the Marine line still matters. At 42mm with the in-house UN-150 automatic, it delivers a proper dress-sport proposition at a price well below the brand's complication-heavy headliners. No gimmicks, no gilt excess: just a tool-legible dial and a movement the brand built itself.
Ulysse Nardin spent the better part of the 19th and early 20th centuries supplying marine chronometers to navies across Europe, the Americas, and Asia. At its peak the brand held more observatory timing certifications than any competitor, a record built on precision under real nautical conditions. The Marine collection was introduced in the modern era specifically to carry that chronometer heritage forward in wearable form.
The Torpilleur, launched in 2019, sits at the accessible entry of that line: simpler than the Grand Deck Tourbillon, more honest than the flashier Marine Diver derivatives, and sized at 42mm for genuine everyday wear.
The rubber and leather strap options from the factory vary considerably in quality; the integrated rubber strap wears well but some third-party leather options supplied with certain references feel underspecced for the price. Dial color consistency has been reported as a minor issue across production runs, particularly on the blue variants where the gradient can look flatter in person than in press imagery. The UN-150 is a solid movement but service infrastructure outside of authorized dealers is still thin, so factor that in if you are not near a UN service center.
Lug width is 22mm, which opens up strap options nicely, but the lug-to-case geometry makes some aftermarket straps sit awkwardly without tapering. Resale on the Torpilleur is soft relative to comparable Swiss sport watches, which is a buy opportunity but also a signal that the broader market has not fully priced the in-house movement into secondary values yet.