Side by side

Oak & Oscar The AtwoodvsGeckota Pioneer Classic Edition

The numbers, the dial colors, the calibers — laid out so you can stop flipping between tabs.

The Atwood
Oak & OscarThe Atwood
MSRP $2,650
Pioneer Classic Edition
GeckotaPioneer Classic Edition
MSRP $399

At a glance

17 of 29 specs differ
Diameter
The Atwood39mm
Pioneer Classic Edition41.5mm
Power Reserve
The Atwood58 hoursh
Pioneer Classic Edition40h
Water Resistance
The Atwood50m
Pioneer Classic Edition100m
MSRP
The Atwood$2,650
Pioneer Classic Edition$399

Full specifications

Case

7 specs
Category
Chronograph
Field
Diameter
39mm
41.5mm
Thickness
12.9mm
12.05mm
Lug-to-Lug
46mm
47.8mm
Lug Width
20mm
Water Resistance
50m
100m
Caseback
Solid screw-down
Solid

Crystal & Dial

4 specs
Crystal Shape
Double-domed
Flat
AR Coating
Underside
Inner
Dial Color
White
Red
Lume
Super-LumiNova
None

Movement

5 specs
Caliber
Sellita AMT5100M
NH38
Type
Manual
Automatic
Beat Rate
4 vph
28,800 vph
Power Reserve
58 hoursh
40h
Jewels
23
25

Pricing

1 specs
MSRP
$2,650
$399

Follow this matchup

Get a note when Oak & Oscar The Atwood vs Geckota Pioneer Classic Edition gets more votes, a community discussion, or a price drop. No account needed.

What people say

Owners + reviewers, side by side

Synthesized for each watch independently from owner discussions, enthusiast forums, written reviews, and video reviewers.

Oak & Oscar The Atwood

Oak & Oscar The Atwood is widely praised for its 39mm size and clean design, with reviewers highlighting the powdery matte sandwich dial and smooth pusher action. The manual-wind Sellita AMT5100M flyback chronograph movement is noted for its blued column wheel. Some reviewers would prefer contrasting case finishes, but the fully brushed finish and drilled lug holes contribute to its tool watch feel. Overall, owners and reviewers rate Oak & Oscar The Atwood highly for its excellent value and compact, tool-watch aesthetic.

Geckota Pioneer Classic Edition

The Geckota Pioneer Classic Edition is praised for its retro-futuristic design, striking dial with vertical brushing that shifts color, and excellent lume. Owners find it offers excellent value for money and appreciate its solid, comfortable weight and higher quality stock straps. However, the thin cross-hair design can disappear from a distance, making the dial less coherent when viewed afar, and some note it wears large due to its size and lack of a prominent bezel. One owner points out the crystal is very reflective, the gold accents appear cheap, and the case finish resembles chrome more than polish, with a loose fleck of lume also noted. Overall, owners rate the Geckota Pioneer Classic Edition highly for its distinctive retro design and strong value proposition.

Keep exploring

More watches worth a look

Matched to the watches above on size, movement, style and price — microbrands first. Open any one to dig in.

Adjacent matchups

People also compared

Comparisons nearby in the catalog — alternatives to the watches above paired against the matchup.