Omega Military Serial Numbers & Wartime Production Guide 1938–1945

Omega military watches from the Second World War period are among the most historically important and collectible vintage Omega timepieces. For collectors, one of the most common questions is whether a wartime Omega serial number proves that a watch was military issued.

The answer is simple: no single serial number can prove military issue on its own.

A wartime Omega movement number can help date the production period of the movement, but genuine military identification requires a wider inspection of the watch, including the case reference, dial style, military engravings, movement calibre and overall period correctness.

Omega and the British Ministry of Defence

Omega was one of the major suppliers of watches to Great Britain’s Ministry of Defence during the Second World War. According to published historical accounts based on Omega’s own records, the company supplied more than 110,000 watches to the British MoD during the war, including watches used by pilots, navigators and soldiers.

Omega was valued because it could produce accurate watches in large quantities. During the war, reliable timing instruments were essential for aviation, navigation, coordination and field use. Omega supplied several important references to British military forces, including RAF and Fleet Air Arm watches.

Understanding Wartime Omega Serial Numbers

For most vintage Omega watches, the serial number is found on the movement. This number is normally used to estimate the approximate production period of the movement. On many vintage Omega watches, the movement serial number is engraved on a bridge of the internal movement.

Serial number charts should always be treated as approximate. Movement production, case production, final assembly and military delivery did not always happen at exactly the same time.

A watch with a 1940s movement serial number is not automatically a military watch. Omega also produced civilian watches during the same period.

Approximate Omega Wartime Serial Number Ranges

The following ranges should be used only as a general dating guide for Omega movements from the wartime period.

Movement Serial Number RangeApproximate Production Period
8,000,000–8,999,999Mid to late 1930s
9,000,000–9,999,999Around 1939 onward
10,000,000–10,999,999Around 1944 onward
11,000,000–11,999,999Late 1940s / post-war period

Omega serial number charts commonly place 9 million movements around 1939, 10 million around 1944, and 11 million around 1947.

This means that many wartime and immediate post-war Omega watches will be found within the broad 9 million to 11 million serial number range. However, this range must never be used alone as proof of military issue.

Why Serial Numbers Alone Are Not Enough

A wartime serial number only tells us that the movement was produced during, or near, the wartime period.

It does not prove:

  • that the watch was ordered by the military;
  • that the case is original to the movement;
  • that the dial is original;
  • that the watch was issued to British forces;
  • that the watch is a correct military specification example.

A civilian Omega from the 1940s may have a similar movement serial number to a military-issued Omega. This is why collectors should always examine the complete watch.

Important Omega Military References

Several Omega references are strongly associated with wartime British military use.

Omega CK2129

The Omega CK2129 was one of the early wartime Omega watches supplied to the British Ministry of Defence. Around 2,000 examples are reported to have been delivered at the beginning of the war. It was designed for legibility, with a clear dial and Arabic numerals.

Omega UK/CK2292

The Omega UK/CK2292 is one of the best-known wartime Omega military references. It was supplied to RAF and Fleet Air Arm personnel and used Omega’s famous 30mm movement family. Published historical accounts describe it as one of the most widely used Omega watches supplied to the British forces during the war.

Omega CK2444 / WWW

Towards the end of the war, Omega supplied the CK2444, better known among collectors as the Omega WWW. The letters WWW stand for Watch, Wrist, Waterproof. These watches were made to British military specification and are part of the famous group now known as the “Dirty Dozen”.

The CK2444 used the manually wound Omega calibre 30T2 and was produced in significant numbers, with around 25,000 examples often cited by collectors and historical watch sources.

Omega 30T2 and Military Collecting

The Omega 30T2 is one of the most important manually wound Omega calibres of the twentieth century. It is strongly associated with military collecting because it was used in several wartime and military-specification Omega watches, including the Omega WWW.

However, it is important to be precise:

Not every Omega 30T2 is military.

Omega also used 30mm family movements in many civilian watches. A 30T2 movement should only be described as military when it is found in the correct military case, with correct markings and period-correct configuration.

Military Markings to Look For

A genuine military Omega should usually show more than just a wartime movement serial number.

Important details may include:

  • Broad Arrow marking
  • WWW engraving
  • 6B/159 markings
  • military issue numbers
  • correct case reference
  • correct dial layout
  • correct luminous numerals and hands
  • fixed bars or correct military case construction where applicable

The Broad Arrow marking is especially important on British military watches, as it indicates government property. On Omega WWW watches, Broad Arrow markings may be found on the dial and case back.

Common Collector Mistakes

Mistake 1: “A wartime serial number means military issue”

This is incorrect. A wartime serial number only helps date the movement. It does not prove military use.

Mistake 2: “Every Omega 30T2 is military”

This is also incorrect. The 30T2 was used in both civilian and military watches.

Mistake 3: “A military-style dial makes the watch military”

A military-style dial is not enough. Dials can be refinished, replaced or modified. Military identification should rely on the complete watch.

Mistake 4: “Case and movement numbers must match”

For most vintage Omega watches, the movement serial number and case reference number are different types of numbers. They are not expected to match. The correct question is whether the movement, case, dial and reference are historically consistent.

The Omega WWW “Dirty Dozen”

The “Dirty Dozen” refers to twelve military wristwatches commissioned by the British Ministry of Defence during the Second World War. The twelve brands were Buren, Cyma, Eterna, Grana, IWC, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Lemania, Longines, Omega, Record, Timor and Vertex.

The watches were built to military requirements: they needed to be accurate, reliable, durable, waterproof and suitable for field use.

Omega’s Dirty Dozen model is one of the most desirable of the group. It used the manually wound Omega calibre 30T2 and is usually encountered with a black dial, luminous Arabic numerals, subsidiary seconds and military case markings.

How to Assess a Wartime Omega

When assessing a possible military Omega, collectors should consider the following points together:

  1. Movement serial number
    Does the movement date to the correct period?
  2. Movement calibre
    Is the calibre correct for the claimed reference?
  3. Case reference
    Does the case reference match known military examples?
  4. Military engravings
    Are the markings correct, original and consistent?
  5. Dial and hands
    Are they correct for the reference and period?
  6. Case construction
    Does the case match the expected military specification?
  7. Provenance or archive documentation
    Is there any supporting documentation, such as an Omega Extract from the Archives?

Final Thoughts

Omega military watches from 1938–1945 are historically important, highly collectible and often misunderstood.

The key point for collectors is that a serial number is only one part of the evidence. A wartime serial number can help date the movement, but it cannot prove military issue by itself.

The strongest examples are those where the movement serial number, calibre, case reference, dial, hands, engravings and military markings all support the same conclusion.

For collectors, watchmakers and restorers, understanding these details is essential when studying Omega wartime watches, especially examples fitted with the famous 30T2 movement family.

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