A $499 automatic watch from a British microbrand that launched on Kickstarter and has, against most odds, turned into something worth taking seriously. The Trackday is the loudest version of the Coniston line, and it earns the attention.
The Verdict
For under $500, the Coniston Trackday delivers a properly constructed mechanical watch with a movement that actually runs, a case finished with more care than the price suggests, and a story behind it that isn't manufactured. If you're in the market for a driver's watch that doesn't require a Swiss surname on the dial, this is a reasonable answer.
The Make
The case is 41mm across and 11.1mm thick, stainless steel throughout, with a dual-texture finish: knurled outer bezel ring, polished chamfers, brushed flanks. The knurling is functional enough to grip and well-defined enough to look considered rather than decorative. Sapphire crystal sits above a multi-layer dial that does a lot of work in a small space: a seconds track on the outer ring, a cream luminous moat, a pale blue central plateau, and a marigold orange inner ring that ties back to the Gulf-livery NATO strap included in this configuration. The sky-blue and orange combination is a direct nod to the Gulf Racing palette, and Marloe doesn't try to hide it.
The movement is a Miyota 8N24, a Japanese automatic with 21 jewels, 40-plus hours of power reserve, hacking seconds, and hand-winding. It is not a Swiss movement. It is also not a problem. The 8N24 is honest about what it is: reliable, serviceable, and appropriate at this price. The exhibition caseback is engraved with "Courage is Not Being Fearless," a phrase sourced from Oracle of Time and tied to the Coniston collection's thread around Donald and Malcolm Campbell's speed record legacy. Marloe donates royalties from the Coniston line to the Campbell Family Heritage Trust, which is the kind of detail that either matters to you or doesn't. The watch is rated to 10 ATM, fine for swimming, not for diving.
The Fit
The 41mm diameter and 11.1mm case height sit well on a medium to larger wrist without crowding it. Lug width is 20mm, and quick-release bars mean strap swaps take about thirty seconds. The NATO strap in this configuration is the statement choice; a brown leather or plain black would dial it back considerably for anyone who finds the Gulf colorway too forward.
The Context
At $499, the Coniston Trackday competes with the lower end of Seiko's Presage line and sits just below entry-level offerings from Christopher Ward (itself a British brand with more SKUs and a longer track record). The Miyota movement is a step below Christopher Ward's SH21 in-house caliber but the Coniston's case finishing is more distinctive than most of what Seiko produces at this price. If the color combination does nothing for you, Marloe offers quieter Coniston variants. If you want something louder, this is the loudest they go.
The Personal Note
I've handled this but not owned it. The knurled bezel has more grip than you'd expect from something primarily decorative, and the dial layers read clearly under light in a way that photographs don't quite capture. At $499 I'd want to wear it for a month before committing, but nothing about the construction gave me a reason to put it down quickly.



