Key Highlights
- Reference 03.A384.400/69.M384 — 37 mm tonneau-case stainless steel chronograph, directly derived from 1969 blueprints
- White lacquered dial with brown-toned “chocolate panda” sub-dials and “old radium” Super-LumiNova on rhodium-plated, faceted hands and markers
- El Primero 400 calibre: 5 Hz (36,000 vph), 1/10th-second chronograph precision, 50-hour power reserve, 278 components
- Iconic Gay Frères “ladder” bracelet in stainless steel, reissued faithfully from the original 1969 specification
- Priced at 8,900 CHF / 10,000 USD — available at Zenith boutiques and authorised retailers worldwide

The Tropical Dial Tradition and Its Controlled Revival
Among the most coveted phenomena in vintage horology, tropical dials occupy a category unto themselves. What began as an unintended consequence — ultraviolet exposure and gradual oxidation transforming black or grey dial surfaces into warm brown tones over decades — became, in the auction rooms and collector communities of the last two decades, one of the defining markers of desirability. No two vintage tropicals age identically, and that uniqueness commands serious premiums.
Zenith‘s approach with the Chronomaster Revival A384 Tropical is precise and considered. Rather than chasing the patina of a single archived example, the brand has translated the visual register of tropical dials into a controlled, coherent aesthetic: white lacquered base, brown-toned counters at 3, 6, and 9 o’clock in the “chocolate panda” configuration, and a matching tachymetric scale rendered in the same warm palette. The result is not a replica of chance — it is a designed language of age, executed with contemporary discipline.
Old Radium and the Language of Patina
The luminous compound applied to the faceted, rhodium-plated hands and applied hour markers is specified as “old radium” Super-LumiNova — a formulation that mimics the cream-to-gold discolouration characteristic of vintage radium-lume without any of its hazard. A vivid red chronograph seconds hand cuts across this warm palette, providing the kind of sharp legibility contrast that defines the best vintage sports chronographs. It is an accent with purpose, not decoration.

Case Architecture: Fidelity to 1969
The case measures 37 mm, compact by current standards but correct for this reference. Zenith developed it directly from the historical blueprints of the original A384, preserving the sharp tonneau profile, pump-style chronograph pushers, and the characterful interplay of brushed and polished surfaces that marked the golden period of Swiss sports chronographs. Water resistance is rated at 5 ATM — sufficient for the contemporary collector who wears rather than vaults.
The Gay Frères Ladder Bracelet
The stainless steel “ladder” bracelet is among the most recognisable bracelet designs in the Revival collection’s armoury. Originally produced for Zenith by Gay Frères in 1969, it is defined by its open-link construction — lightweight, flexible, and with a tactile quality that modern high-polished bracelets rarely achieve. Its reissue here reinforces the authenticity of the piece; the bracelet is not contextually appropriate, it is architecturally correct.

El Primero 400: The Most Direct Descendant
The movement specification is unambiguous in its pedigree. The El Primero 400 is described by Zenith as the most faithful descendant of the original El Primero 3019 PHC of 1969 — the calibre that established the world’s first automatic, integrated high-frequency chronograph. Operating at 5 Hz (36,000 vibrations per hour), it measures elapsed time to 1/10th of a second, a performance figure that remains technically significant across the entire category. Power reserve stands at 50 hours across 278 components, and the oscillating weight carries a Côtes de Genève finishing motif with the five-pointed star cutout visible through the sapphire caseback. Since its first appearance at Watches and Wonders, the El Primero platform has continued to serve as the technical backbone of the CHRONOMASTER line.
The chronograph function layout follows the original configuration: central chronograph hand, 30-minute counter at 3 o’clock, 12-hour counter at 6 o’clock, small seconds at 9 o’clock, and a date aperture at 4:30. The column-wheel architecture ensures precise, tactile chronograph engagement — a functional standard that collectors of the vintage original would find entirely familiar.

Collector Positioning in the GCC Market
At 8,900 CHF (10,000 USD), the A384 Tropical occupies a position in the vintage-revival segment where competition is genuine — references from Rolex and Omega in comparable tonal configurations draw similar collector attention. What differentiates the Zenith proposition is the El Primero’s measurable technical advantage in chronograph frequency, the direct case lineage to historical tooling, and the bracelet’s authentic provenance. For GCC collectors with established vintage awareness, the tropical dial language and the 37 mm case dimension place this among the more characterful revival offerings of 2026.

For more on Zenith’s manufacturing history and the full range of CHRONOMASTER references, visit the official Zenith website.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the tropical dial on the Zenith Chronomaster Revival A384?
The tropical dial features a white lacquered base with brown-toned sub-dials in the “chocolate panda” configuration at 3, 6, and 9 o’clock, designed to evoke the warm patina of naturally aged vintage pieces without relying on chance oxidation. Zenith created this as a controlled aesthetic language rather than replicating a single archived example.
What movement powers the Zenith A384 Tropical chronograph?
The watch is powered by the El Primero 400 calibre, operating at 5 Hz (36,000 vph) with 1/10th-second chronograph precision, a 50-hour power reserve, and 278 components. Zenith describes it as the most faithful descendant of the original El Primero 3019 PHC from 1969, which pioneered the world’s first automatic, integrated high-frequency chronograph.
What bracelet comes with the Chronomaster Revival A384?
The watch features the iconic Gay Frères “ladder” bracelet in stainless steel, faithfully reissued from the original 1969 specification with its characteristic open-link construction that is lightweight and flexible. This bracelet is architecturally correct to the historical design and reinforces the authenticity of the revival piece.


