Editorial·Watches

The Complication Nobody Talks About: IWC Aquatimer Split Minute Chronograph Titanium IW372304

28 April 2026·By Elxon
The Complication Nobody Talks About: IWC Aquatimer Split Minute Chronograph Titanium IW372304

Most dive watch chronographs do the same thing. You press a button, the hand sweeps, you stop it, you read the time. Fine. Useful, even. But IWC looked at that setup decades ago and asked a question most watchmakers didn’t bother with: what happens when you need to time something underwater and you also need to keep tracking elapsed bottom time?

That’s what the split-minute chronograph is for. Not the split-second — that’s the glamorous complication you see in dress watches and Grand Prix timing. The split-minute is its blue-collar cousin, designed for situations where losing count of minutes could actually matter. In the Aquatimer IW372304, IWC gave the dive watch community one of the few purpose-built timing tools that goes beyond “start, stop, reset.”

IWC Aquatimer Split Minute Chronograph Titanium IW372304
IWC Aquatimer Split Minute Chronograph Titanium IW372304

Here’s how it works in practice: two minute counters run simultaneously from a single chronograph start. You can stop one independently to take a reading — say, to log a decompression interval — while the other keeps running. It sounds simple until you realize how few manufacturers have ever bothered engineering this into a purpose-built dive case.

The 44mm titanium case helps here, and not just for weight. Titanium’s thermal conductivity is lower than steel, which means it doesn’t pull heat from your wrist as aggressively in cold water. It’s a small thing, but if you’ve ever worn a steel dive watch in genuinely cold conditions, you notice. The IW372304 wears surprisingly well for its size, partly because of that titanium weight savings and partly because IWC kept the lug-to-lug reasonable.

At around US$45,000, this sits in interesting territory — more expensive than a standard Aquatimer, but considerably less than what you’d pay for a split-second chronograph in a comparable case. It’s a lot of genuine mechanical engineering for the money. The kind of watch where the complication isn’t decorative. It was designed to solve a specific problem, and it does it cleanly.

If you’re the type who gravitates toward watches where every feature earns its place on the dial, the IW372304 is worth a close look.

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