Bremont has expanded its Altitude family with the Air Force Blue capsule collection, a four-watch pilot lineup that brings a unified blue dial treatment to three existing models and debuts the new MB Meteor Time Zones.
The release lands squarely in Bremont’s home territory, even as the brand continues to grow collections such as Terra Nova, Supermarine and the recent Supernova Chronograph.
The new MB Meteor Time Zones leads the capsule
The standout here is the Altitude MB Meteor Time Zones, a 42mm Grade 2 titanium pilot’s watch with a multi-time-zone display built around Bremont’s Trip-Tick case construction.

Its 12.23mm-thick case uses a blue PVD-coated knurled barrel, a glassbox sapphire crystal, a sapphire caseback and 100 metres of water resistance.
Like other MB-series Bremonts, it also carries the brand’s anti-shock mounting system and a soft-iron anti-magnetic cage, which gives the watch a more functional footing than a simple dial-colour edition.
The dual-crown layout is central to the watch’s character, with the upper crown operating an internal bi-directional Roto-Click world-time bezel and the lower crown handling winding and setting.

The city ring works with a 24-hour day-night scale and a red-tipped central GMT hand, giving the wearer a quick way to track multiple time zones without pushing the dial into instrument-panel clutter.
Air Force Blue gives the display room to breathe
The blue dial suits the MB Meteor Time Zones particularly well because it gives the world-time flange, 24-hour ring and applied numerals a coherent backdrop.
Glossy black hands, stencil-style applied numerals and Super-LumiNova with blue emission keep the watch legible, while the red accents on the GMT and seconds hands add contrast in a measured way.

Inside is Bremont’s BB641 automatic movement, using a Sellita SW330-2 architecture with a 56-hour power reserve and a 28,800vph frequency.
The MB Meteor Time Zones is offered on a titanium bracelet, a blue leather-rubber strap or a black-and-blue NATO strap, with pricing from GBP 5,100 on straps and GBP 5,450 on bracelet.
The core MB Meteor gets the same RAF-inspired treatment
The standard Altitude MB Meteor Air Force Blue keeps the 42mm titanium Trip-Tick case, dual crowns, internal Roto-Click bezel and blue PVD knurled barrel, but pares the display back to hours, minutes, seconds and date.

It uses the BB14 automatic movement, derived from the La Joux-Perret G100, running at 28,800vph with a healthy 68-hour power reserve.
The dial includes applied numerals with blue-emission lume and the familiar lollipop seconds hand with a pullcord counterweight, maintaining the modern Bremont pilot-watch identity without adding travel complications.
Pricing is GBP 4,600 on a strap and GBP 4,950 on a titanium bracelet.
Altitude 39 Date and Chronograph GMT broaden the range
For a more compact option, the Altitude 39 Date Air Force Blue brings the same colour story to a 39mm 904L stainless steel Trip-Tick case measuring 11.19mm thick and 47.17mm lug to lug.
It has a single-crown layout, a DLC-coated case barrel, 100 metres of water resistance and the same BB14 automatic movement with a 68-hour reserve.
At GBP 3,700 on strap and GBP 3,950 on bracelet, it is the most straightforward daily-wear proposition in the capsule.
The Altitude Chronograph GMT Air Force Blue is the most instrument-like member of the set, using a 42mm 904L stainless steel Trip-Tick case measuring 14.7mm thick and housing Bremont’s BC781 automatic chronograph movement.
Its dial combines a 30-minute counter at 12 o’clock, a 12-hour counter with integrated date at 6 o’clock, a propeller-style running seconds display at 9 o’clock and a two-tone 24-hour GMT scale on the flange.
The Chronograph GMT is priced at GBP 5,500 on a strap and GBP 5,750 on a bracelet.
As a group, the Air Force Blue capsule feels most compelling for collectors who already see Bremont through an aviation lens, with the new MB Meteor Time Zones adding the most useful complication and the clearest reason for the collection’s arrival.




