The Invicta is meticulously crafted and comes remarkably wertig therefore. The housing is oberseits matt and polished on the flanks. Opposite the crown is decorated with a cross, a INVICTA lettering. The bottom is polished, as is the floor with window onto plant. The crown is screwed down and signed, a crown protection is indicated on the housing. The threads see worked out clean. The crown can be Thanks to its size soulful solve or screw and jumps to points out safely. The bezel is painted, can be rotated in 120 steps to the left side and snapped a little rickety but clean one. Unfortunately the bezel is a tad under the glass, reducing the chance of scratches and possibly chamfers does not diminish the glass. The glass itself is reported as 'Flame Fusion', a kind of hardened mineral glass.
The bezel measures 42 mm, with crown there are 47 mm above the horns of 51 mm and thickness 14 mm, web width 22 mm - rather nothing for small wrists.
The bracelet is processed solid and tidy up on the clasp. The clasp is specially secured and has 4 holes for fine adjustment. Individual members can be found in a pen (without sleeve).
The dial and hands - Submariner - easy to read. Indices painted black edged, therefore hardly reflections. Pointer lengths are consistent. At least in my copy pointers, indexes and bezel are set clean. What I do not like here is the color scheme. White dial, hands and indexes framed black - ok. But this color the hands and indexes is for me nothing half and nothing whole. A rather glaring yellow-pink-orange-pink-I-know-not-what-tone that is not in harmony.
Night readability is a problem. The dial itself is lit completely by blue - great to look at. The pointer tend a little more green into. 10s illuminated with the LED flashlight will submit to the dial for the night - nice. Only the pointer fade a little faster, and then lift later barely from Ziffernbatt from, but are still light enough so that the black framing of the pointer is not significant. Readability then to zero.
Inside work ELT the NH35A, ultimately a solid Seiko automatic movement with date, hand-wound and stop seconds, which is rare in this price range. The decorated rotor carries the Invicta logo. In the forums no blunder of the work are known. I wore the clock about 1 week and the clock was ticking in time with a deviation of +/- 1 second day 10 seconds before. That's a good value.
Whether the design like everyone needs to know itself. In a clear reference to the Submariner I think it succeeded (apart from the color of the indices) and independent enough.
Due to the aforementioned, partly subjective deficiencies, and considering the price I subtract a star.