Solar vs Automatic
Two of the watches in our cabinet never need a battery -- but they get there in completely different ways. Solar, in the form of Citizen Eco-Drive, charges from light and gives you the accuracy and ease of quartz. Automatic, in the form of the Tissot Powermatic 80, winds itself from the motion of your wrist and gives you real Swiss mechanical craft. This is OD's strongest head-to-head because we stock both flagships, so we can compare them honestly. Read the short answer for a quick verdict, the how-it-works sections for the engineering, and which to buy to decide. For the wider picture, see our watch movements hub.
Solar vs automatic at a glance
| Solar / Eco-Drive (Citizen) | Automatic (Tissot Powermatic 80) | |
|---|---|---|
| Power source | Light -- a solar cell charges a rechargeable cell | Your wrist -- a rotor winds a mainspring |
| Accuracy | Quartz: about ±15 seconds / month | Mechanical: about ±15 seconds / day |
| Battery | None to replace, ever | None -- fully mechanical, no battery |
| Servicing | Minimal -- occasional seal check only | Professional service every few years |
| Lifespan | Decades of low-maintenance wear | Generations -- serviceable, heirloom |
| Best for | Fuss-free everyday wear | Enthusiasts and keepsakes |
| Shop | Citizen Eco-Drive | Tissot Powermatic 80 |
The verdict
The short answer
Buy a Citizen Eco-Drive if you want the most fuss-free everyday watch we sell -- it charges from light, keeps quartz accuracy and never needs a battery. Buy a Tissot Powermatic 80 if you want a real Swiss mechanical watch with 80 hours of self-winding power and heirloom appeal. Both are superb; they simply suit two different owners.
In one paragraph
These are the two flagships in our cabinet, and the choice between them is genuinely about you, not about which is better. A Citizen Eco-Drive is a light-powered quartz watch: accurate to seconds a month, charged by daylight or office lighting, and built to run for the life of the watch with no battery to replace. A Tissot Powermatic 80 is a Swiss automatic: a mechanical movement that winds itself from your wrist, holds an 80-hour reserve, and is made to be serviced and handed down. Pick Eco-Drive for total convenience; pick the Powermatic 80 for craft and keepsake value.
Choose the Citizen Eco-Drive if
You want a watch you can put on and forget -- accurate, light-powered, no winding and no battery ever. It is the truest set-and-forget everyday watch we stock.
Choose the Tissot Powermatic 80 if
You wear a watch most days, enjoy real mechanical watchmaking, and want a Swiss automatic with an 80-hour reserve to keep and pass on. It is the enthusiast's and the heirloom choice.
How each one works
How solar / Eco-Drive works
A Citizen Eco-Drive turns any light into power. A solar cell under the dial charges a long-life rechargeable cell, which runs an ordinary quartz movement -- so it has the accuracy of quartz and never needs a disposable battery.
Light cell and capacitor
Behind the dial of every Eco-Drive sits a photovoltaic cell -- often hidden under a coloured or patterned face. It converts any light, sunlight or indoor lighting, into electricity that charges a rechargeable titanium lithium-ion cell. That cell, not a disposable battery, powers the watch. A full charge typically runs an Eco-Drive for at least six months in total darkness, and power-save versions hold far longer by stopping the hands until they next see light.
Never needs a battery
Because the cell recharges every time the watch sees light, there is nothing to replace for the life of the watch -- no battery change every couple of years, and none of the small risk of leakage that a dead cell brings. Leave a Citizen Eco-Drive on a windowsill and it tops itself up. It is the most genuinely fit-and-forget watch we sell.
The accuracy of quartz
Underneath the light-powered charging system, an Eco-Drive is a quartz watch: a vibrating crystal counted by a circuit, accurate to about ±15 seconds a month -- far steadier than any mechanical watch. You get that accuracy with zero upkeep. For the deeper detail, read our Eco-Drive guide, or browse the range at Citizen Eco-Drive.
How automatic works
A Tissot Powermatic 80 winds itself from the motion of your wrist. A weighted rotor spins as you move, tensioning a mainspring; that stored energy drives the gears through a regulated escapement -- a purely mechanical watch with no battery and no electronics.
Rotor and mainspring
An automatic is a mechanical movement with one clever addition: a semicircular weight called a rotor, mounted on a pivot on the back of the movement. As your wrist moves, gravity keeps the rotor swinging, and a winding mechanism converts that motion into one-way winding of the mainspring -- a flat coiled spring inside a barrel. The spring slowly unwinds to drive a train of gears, and an escapement releases that energy in tiny, equal steps to move the hands. There is nothing electronic inside; the energy comes from you.
The 80-hour reserve
The number that matters in daily life is the power reserve -- how long the watch keeps running after it is taken off. Standard automatics hold roughly 38 to 50 hours, but Tissot's Powermatic 80 holds a full 80 hours. Take it off on Friday evening and it is still ticking on Monday morning. It also carries a Nivachron anti-magnetic hairspring, which shrugs off the magnetism that can throw older mechanical watches off the pace.
Swiss mechanical craft
Worn daily, the rotor keeps the mainspring wound so you never touch the crown; leave it off long enough and it simply stops once the reserve runs down, then needs a wind and a time reset. That is the trade for owning a living piece of Swiss watchmaking. For how movements work across the board, see our watch movements hub; to shop the calibre, see Tissot Powermatic 80.
Living with each
Accuracy & maintenance
On accuracy, the Eco-Drive wins clearly: quartz holds seconds a month, while a mechanical Powermatic 80 runs to seconds a day. On maintenance, solar is near zero; an automatic eventually needs a service. Both are reliable -- they simply ask different things of you.
Accuracy: quartz vs mechanical
A Citizen Eco-Drive keeps quartz time -- about ±15 seconds a month -- and does it without any attention from you. A Tissot Powermatic 80, like any quality mechanical movement, runs to roughly ±15 seconds a day; that is excellent for a mechanical watch and you may correct it now and then. If raw accuracy is your priority, the Eco-Drive is the more precise of the two by a wide margin.
Maintenance and servicing
The Eco-Drive needs essentially nothing: no winding, no battery, just the occasional check of seals if it is a water-resistant model. A mechanical automatic such as the Powermatic 80 benefits from a professional service every few years to clean and re-oil the movement -- the natural upkeep of any watch with hundreds of moving parts. Our watch care guide covers servicing intervals and everyday care for both.
Cost & longevity
Over a lifetime the Eco-Drive is the cheaper, lower-upkeep watch -- no batteries, no servicing. The Powermatic 80 costs more to keep but offers something solar cannot: a serviceable mechanical heart built to be handed down for generations.
Cost of ownership
A Citizen Eco-Drive is the lower-cost watch to live with: no battery changes ever, and no mechanical servicing, so the price you pay is close to the whole cost of ownership. A Tissot Powermatic 80 carries the running cost of an occasional service -- but in return it is fully serviceable, so a good automatic can be kept running indefinitely rather than retired.
Longevity and heirloom appeal
This is where the automatic answers back. A well-serviced mechanical watch can run for generations, which is exactly why automatics are the watches people inherit. An Eco-Drive is the longest-lasting in low-maintenance terms -- decades of fit-and-forget wear -- but the Powermatic 80 is the one with genuine heirloom appeal, a mechanical movement you can watch through a display caseback and pass on.
Which should you buy
If you want one fuss-free everyday watch, buy the Citizen Eco-Drive. If you want a Swiss mechanical watch to enjoy and hand down, buy the Tissot Powermatic 80. There is no wrong answer here -- only the one that fits how you like to own a watch.
Buy the Eco-Drive for everyday ease
Choose Citizen Eco-Drive if you value convenience above all: accurate, light-powered, never wound, never re-batteried. It is the ideal grab-and-go watch and the easiest first proper watch to own -- put it on and forget about it.
Buy the Powermatic 80 for craft and keepsake
Choose the Tissot Powermatic 80 if you want to own real Swiss watchmaking: an 80-hour self-winding movement powered by your own wrist, serviceable for life, and made to be passed on. It is the enthusiast's pick and the milestone-gift pick.
Still torn?
If you genuinely cannot decide, lean on use: a single everyday watch you barely think about points to the Eco-Drive; a watch you will enjoy as an object and keep for years points to the Powermatic 80. Message us and we will talk it through.
Both, at OD's
We stock both flagships, so you can compare them properly: Citizen Eco-Drive for light-powered quartz, and the Tissot Powermatic 80 for Swiss automatic. These are the two real heroes of our watch cabinet.
Citizen Eco-Drive
Citizen is the inventor of Eco-Drive and the name we carry for light-powered watches -- accurate quartz that charges from any light and never needs a battery. Browse the range at Citizen Eco-Drive, or read the technology in full on our Eco-Drive guide.
Tissot Powermatic 80
Tissot is our Swiss watchmaker, and the Powermatic 80 is its modern automatic workhorse -- an 80-hour self-winding calibre with a Nivachron anti-magnetic hairspring. Shop it at Tissot Powermatic 80.
Compare them with us
Both watches are in the cabinet, so the best way to choose is to try them. Rivals such as Seiko's Kinetic or Spring Drive reach similar fit-and-forget convenience, but our two heroes -- Citizen Eco-Drive and the Tissot Powermatic 80 -- are the pair we stock and recommend.
Frequently asked questions
Solar or automatic -- which should I buy?
Buy a Citizen Eco-Drive if you want the most fuss-free everyday watch: light-powered, accurate quartz, with no battery to replace. Buy a Tissot Powermatic 80 if you want a real Swiss mechanical watch that winds itself from your wrist and is built to be handed down. Both are excellent -- they suit different owners.
Is solar or automatic more accurate?
Solar wins on accuracy by a wide margin. A Citizen Eco-Drive keeps quartz time -- about plus or minus 15 seconds a month -- while a Tissot Powermatic 80, like any mechanical watch, runs to roughly plus or minus 15 seconds a day. If raw accuracy is your priority, choose the Eco-Drive.
Does a Citizen Eco-Drive ever need a battery?
No. An Eco-Drive charges from any light, natural or artificial, and the rechargeable cell is built to last the life of the watch. There is no disposable battery to replace -- it is our most genuinely fit-and-forget watch.
How long does an Eco-Drive run in the dark?
A fully charged Citizen Eco-Drive runs for at least six months in total darkness, and power-save versions far longer because they stop the hands to conserve charge until they next see light. In normal daily wear it simply never runs down.
What is the power reserve of a Tissot Powermatic 80?
The Tissot Powermatic 80 holds an 80-hour power reserve -- far longer than a standard automatic's 38 to 50 hours. Take it off on Friday evening and it is still running on Monday morning.
Do automatic watches stop?
Yes. A Tissot Powermatic 80 only winds while you wear it. Take it off and it keeps running on its 80-hour reserve, then stops and needs winding and resetting. A Citizen Eco-Drive, by contrast, keeps charging from light and does not stop in normal use.
Which is cheaper to own over time, solar or automatic?
The Citizen Eco-Drive is cheaper to live with: no battery changes and no mechanical servicing, so the purchase price is close to the whole cost of ownership. A Tissot Powermatic 80 carries the cost of an occasional service, but in return it is fully serviceable and can be kept running indefinitely.
Does an automatic watch need servicing?
Yes, occasionally. A mechanical automatic such as the Powermatic 80 benefits from a professional service every few years to clean and re-oil the movement. A solar Eco-Drive needs essentially none -- just the occasional seal check on water-resistant models. See our watch care guide for intervals.
Which lasts longer, Eco-Drive or a Tissot automatic?
Both last a very long time, differently. An Eco-Drive is the longest-lasting in low-maintenance terms -- decades of fit-and-forget wear. A serviced Tissot Powermatic 80 can run for generations and is the one with genuine heirloom appeal, a mechanical movement made to be handed down.
Is a Tissot Powermatic 80 a good first automatic?
Yes -- it is one of the best first steps into Swiss watchmaking: an 80-hour self-winding movement with a Nivachron anti-magnetic hairspring, at an attainable price. If you want a mechanical watch to grow with, it is an excellent choice.
Can magnets affect an automatic watch?
Magnetism can make an older mechanical watch run fast or stop, because it affects the hairspring. The Tissot Powermatic 80 uses a Nivachron anti-magnetic hairspring that strongly resists this. A solar Eco-Drive, being quartz, is largely unaffected by magnetism.
Which is better for an everyday watch?
For a single everyday watch you barely think about, the Citizen Eco-Drive is the easier choice -- accurate, light-powered and free of winding or batteries. Choose the Tissot Powermatic 80 instead if you actively want a mechanical watch and enjoy that it is powered by your own wrist.
Which makes the better gift, solar or automatic?
For a thoughtful, no-fuss keepsake that never needs a battery, a Citizen Eco-Drive is ideal. For a milestone -- birthday, anniversary, graduation or retirement -- a Tissot Powermatic 80 Swiss automatic is the gift that gets handed down. Both make superb gifts.
Do you stock both Eco-Drive and the Powermatic 80?
Yes -- both are in our cabinet, which is why this is OD's strongest real comparison. Browse Citizen Eco-Drive for light-powered quartz and Tissot Powermatic 80 for Swiss automatic, or message us and we will help you choose between them.
