There are maybe four companies actually assembling mechanical watches in the United States at any kind of scale, and Weiss is the one most people who care about watches have heard of. The 38mm Standard Issue is the watch that built the brand, and at $2,970 it asks a fair question: what is American hand-assembly worth on top of a Swiss movement?
The Verdict
A genuinely well-made field watch from one of the only American workshops doing this work, priced honestly for what it is. If the Nashville assembly matters to you, it's worth the money. If it doesn't, a Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical does 80% of the job for under $600.
The Make
The case is 316L stainless steel, 38mm across (excluding crown), 46.2mm lug-to-lug, 10.7mm thick. Those are the right field watch numbers. The dial is hand-painted naval brass, which you can see if you look at it under raking light: there's a slight irregularity to the matte black surface that a printed dial never has. Double-domed sapphire on top with multi-layer AR coating, sapphire exhibition caseback held in by four hex screws. Black oxide steel hands with BGW9 lume.
The movement is the Weiss Caliber 2130, which is an ETA 2892-A2 base, hand-finished and regulated in Nashville. 28,800 bph, 42-hour reserve, hacking seconds, quick-set date, Incabloc shock protection. Screw-down crown, 100m water resistance. The 2892 is a known good movement, thinner and generally more refined than the 2824 most field watches at this price use. The finishing on the rotor and bridges is the value-add.
Ships with two Horween straps: olive Cordura canvas and leather.
The Fit
38mm is correct for a field watch and reads true on most wrists from 6.5 to 7.5 inches. At 10.7mm thick it slips under a cuff without fighting. The lug-to-lug of 46.2mm keeps it from looking small on bigger wrists, but if you're over 7.75 inches you may want the 42mm. The Cordura strap wears better than the leather out of the box; the leather needs a few weeks to soften.
The Context
The honest comparison set: Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical ($595), Sinn 556 ($1,500ish), Nomos Club Campus ($1,700ish), Tudor Ranger ($3,275). The Hamilton wins on price-to-spec. The Tudor wins on resale and brand. Weiss wins on provenance: it's the only one in that group assembled in the US by a WOSTEP-trained watchmaker running a small atelier. That's a real thing or it isn't, depending on you.
The Personal Note
The thing that sells this watch in person is the dial. Photos flatten it. Under normal light it looks like a competent field watch; under the right angle you see the brushwork on the naval brass and remember someone actually did that with a hand. Whether that's worth the delta over a Hamilton is a question only you can answer, and Weiss, to their credit, doesn't pretend otherwise.



