If you’ve spent any time around Doxa collectors, you know the T.Graph is the watch everyone covets and almost nobody owns. The original 1969 run was tiny. And the 2019 reissue wasn’t much better, capped at 300 pieces, orange only. Naturally, it was gone in a blink.
And that’s exactly what makes the Sub 200 T.Graph II a big deal. Doxa has finally moved its cult diving chronograph into the permanent catalog, four colorways deep, with no edition number to fight over.

The Chronograph Doxa Shouldn’t Have Built
Doxa built its name stripping the dive watch down to the essentials including that beloved fat orange minute hand, a no-deco bezel, and a dial you can easily read through a flooded mask. A chronograph, however, runs against all of that. There’s more hands, more subdials, and more ways to bury the one number a diver actually needs.

And that’s where Doxa had to get clever. They had to add a chronograph to a watch built on doing less yet somehow still keep it readable underwater. The fact that it worked is why the T.Graph turned into a grail instead of a footnote.

Smaller Where It Counts
On paper, the spec changes from the 2019 version might look small, but certainly worth noting. The case shrinks from 43mm to 42mm across, and thickness drops from 15.15mm to 14.6mm.
Doxa’s cushion case already wears smaller than its numbers suggest thanks to a stubby 44.5mm lug-to-lug, so trimming some of the bulk should make the T.Graph II even easier to live with.

The other headline is the color. Joining the usual Professional orange, Searambler silver, and Sharkhunter black is Caribbean, which is Doxa’s deep navy that fans have loved elsewhere in the Sub line but that has never once landed on a T.Graph.

Honest Hardware
Inside is the Sellita SW510, an automatic chronograph at 4Hz with around 56 hours of reserve. The unidirectional bezel stays your primary timer underwater, while the 30-minute register and running seconds handle surface duty. A screw-down crown and 200m rating keep the diver credentials in tact. And there’s also a date window at the 6 o’clock.
It rides on Doxa’s signature beads-of-rice bracelet or a rubber strap. The bracelet’s new ratcheting micro-adjust is a handy touch, even if it can’t quite recapture the spring-loaded magic of the vintage Doxa clasps it’s chasing.

Spec Sheet
Model: Doxa Sub 200 T.Graph II
Case Size: 42mm
Thickness: 14.6mm
Lug-to-Lug: 44.5mm
Case Material: 316L stainless steel
Crystal: Sapphire with AR coating
Movement: Sellita SW510 automatic chronograph
Frequency: 28,800 vph (4Hz)
Power Reserve: ~56 hours
Water Resistance: 200m
Dial Colors: Professional orange, Searambler silver, Sharkhunter black, Caribbean blue
Band: Beads-of-rice bracelet or FKM rubber strap
Limited Edition: No (permanent collection)
Pricing & Availability
Good news on two fronts: the T.Graph II drops the limited-edition tag entirely, and it undercuts the 2019 reissue it replaces. It’s available now at $4,250 on rubber and $4,290 on the beads-of-rice bracelet. Head over to Doxa’s website to pick your colorway.
Recap
Doxa Sub 200 T.Graph II
Doxa pulls its cult 1969 dive chronograph into the permanent catalog, now slimmer at 42mm and available in Caribbean blue for the first time.