AtomiShine Velocirex Carbon Fiber Review – The Stealth Chronograph With Aerospace-Grade Carbon Fiber
Carbon fiber watches at the budget end of the market often feel more cosmetic than genuinely purposeful. The AtomiShine Velocirex Carbon Fiber takes a different route. This is a full aerospace-grade carbon fiber chronograph with a genuine lightweight construction, sapphire crystal, anti-reflective coating, and a motorsport-inspired dial layout that clearly leans into its racing identity.
What makes the Velocirex interesting is that it does not try to imitate a traditional luxury chronograph. Instead, it embraces a stealthy, technical aesthetic built around lightweight wearability and aggressive dark tones. At just 43 grams for the case, it looks visually imposing yet physically disappears on the wrist. Add in the integrated Velcro strap setup and the Miyota OS20 chronograph movement, and you end up with a watch that feels more like a piece of motorsport equipment than conventional everyday wristwear. Those interested in what else AtomiShine has been doing recently may want to explore some of their other releases.
Design & Case
The Velocirex Carbon Fiber Chronograph measures 39mm in diameter, 13.1mm thick, 46mm lug-to-lug, and uses a standard 20mm lug width. On paper, that makes it a relatively compact chronograph, especially compared with many racing-style watches that rely on oversized proportions to create presence.

The case is made from aerospace grade carbon fiber, with an irregular forged-style carbon pattern running across the case and bezel. It is darker, more organic, and more technical-looking than a normal black PVD-style finish. The full black execution also visually reduces the footprint, so the watch has presence without feeling oversized.
Looking at the side profile, the case flank is slightly convex. The surface feels smooth, but the transitions remain crisp and well defined. The lugs are short, drop away from the case, and have noticeably downturned tips, which should help the watch sit closer to the wrist.

The strap transition also gives the watch an almost integrated feel. There is very little empty space between the spring bar area and the watch head, so the case and strap read as one cohesive sporty form rather than separate components. This release shares many characteristics commonly associated with modern chronograph watches.
Movement & Crown
Inside the watch is the Miyota OS20 quartz chronograph movement. It is a straightforward chronograph caliber, but its appeal is practical. The movement offers stated accuracy of around plus or minus 20 seconds per month, while the battery life is rated up to five years.

Operationally, the chronograph layout is simple. The screw-down chronograph pushers are unscrewed first, then the top pusher starts and stops the chronograph. The lower pusher resets it. The reset action is different from a mecha-quartz chronograph, where the seconds hand usually snaps instantly back to 12.
On the Miyota OS20, the chronograph hand is driven forward back to zero instead. It looks more like the hand is being pushed around the dial rather than mechanically snapping back, giving the reset a slightly more theatrical character. The movement also has a once-per-second tick rather than the five-pulse sweep associated with mecha-quartz movements.

The crown is positioned on the right-hand side, guarded, screw-in, unsigned, and measures 6.9mm across. It is flanked by the two screw-down chronograph pushers, which reinforce the technical look of the case.
Bezel
Above the slightly convex case flank is a fixed carbon fiber bezel with a subtle overhang. It continues the same visual language as the case, keeping the watch coherent from the lower case body through to the upper surface.

The bezel carries a white scale, which gives the otherwise dark watch a cleaner instrument-style frame. It does not rotate, so its role is visual rather than functional in the way a dive bezel would be. Here, it supports the racing chronograph identity and helps define the dial opening.
Sitting just in line with the bezel, or only a hair above it, is a flat sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating. That keeps the top profile controlled and gives the front of the watch a sharper, more technical presentation.
Strap
The Velocirex Carbon Fiber Chronograph comes on an integrated nylon strap design with Velcro. The version shown uses a black nylon strap with red stitching, though the watch can also be had on a red canvas strap with black stitching. Both options tie directly into the racing-inspired dial colors.

The strap construction is more interesting than a standard woven nylon setup. It has a padded build with a genuine calfskin leather underlayer, so the section touching the wrist feels softer and more comfortable. On the outside, it keeps a black water-resistant fabric surface, which gives it a more technical, motorsport-ready appearance.
The red stitching works well visually because it connects with the red chronograph sub-dials and the red-and-white checkered detail around the dial edge. The clasp is also carbon fiber rather than steel, keeping the lightweight theme consistent with the case.

Sizing is clearly defined. The strap fits wrist circumferences from 6.3 inches to 7.1 inches and is secured with a Velcro element at the tip. Flip the watch over and there is a screw-down caseback secured by four visible screws positioned near the corners under the lugs. Stepping back and looking at adjacent options helps frame the value proposition more clearly, you may want to explore a stainless steel version of the Velocirex. Our Comparison Tool makes it easy to compare watch models and their specs side by side.
Crystal & Dial
Under the flat sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating, the dial leans fully into the racing theme. The eye first drops through a brushed piping-down rehaut, which adds depth before reaching the main dial surface.

Around the periphery is a red-and-white printed checker pattern, clearly referencing racing curbs, grid lines, or finishing flag imagery. It gives the black dial a strong visual frame. Extending inward from that outer ring are printed elongated baton hour markers, though these are not lumed and are mainly there for daytime contrast and structure.
The sub-dials sit at 3, 6, and 9 o’clock. At 3 is the 24-hour display, at 6 is the running seconds, and at 9 is the 60-minute chronograph counter. Each register is slightly recessed into the dial and framed by its own track, adding layering and dimensionality.

The side registers at 3 and 9 are finished in dark red, tying back to the checker pattern and strap stitching. The running seconds at 6 sits on a stark white backdrop, creating a strong point of contrast at the bottom of the dial.
The main handset is baton-style, with thin lume plots running through the center. The central chronograph seconds hand uses a chrome arrow tip, while the sub-dial hands are also finished in chrome. In daylight, this helps them stand out cleanly against the red and white registers.

Lume is limited. Only the hour and minute hands are lumed, while the hour markers, chronograph seconds hand, and sub-dial hands remain unlumed. This is not a low-light performance watch in the way a diver would be, but that is not really the identity here.
Summary
The AtomiShine Velocirex Carbon Fiber Chronograph is a distinctive watch because it commits fully to its concept. The aerospace grade carbon fiber case, fixed carbon fiber bezel, carbon fiber clasp, black-and-red dial treatment, recessed registers, and Velcro strap all support the same motorsport-inspired direction.

Its strengths are clear. The case is compact at 39mm, very light at 43g, and visually more aggressive than its footprint suggests. The Miyota OS20 movement gives it practical accuracy, low maintenance, and a rated battery life of up to five years.
There are trade-offs. The chronograph reset does not have the snap of a mecha-quartz movement, and the lume is limited to the hour and minute hands. But taken as a stealthy, ultralight carbon chronograph with a strong racing identity, the Velocirex Carbon Fiber feels focused, coherent, and genuinely different from a standard black steel chronograph. Priced just under $400, buyers have no shortage of alternatives competing for attention.
AtomiShine Velocirex Carbon Fiber Specifications
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Model | AtomiShine Velocirex Carbon Fiber Chronograph |
| Case Material | Aerospace grade carbon fiber |
| Case Diameter | 39mm |
| Case Thickness | 13.1mm |
| Lug-to-Lug | 46mm |
| Lug Width | 20mm |
| Weight | 43g |
| Bezel | Fixed carbon fiber bezel with white scale |
| Crystal | Flat sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating |
| Movement | Miyota OS20 quartz chronograph |
| Crown | Guarded screw-in crown, unsigned, 6.9mm diameter. |
| Pushers | Screw-down chronograph pushers |
| Frequency | Once-per-second tick or pulse rate |
| Dial | Black dial with red and white printed checker pattern. |
| Rehaut | Brushed piping-down rehaut |
| Indices | Printed elongated baton hour markers |
| Sub-Dials | 24-hour display at 3, running seconds at 6, 60-minute chronograph counter at 9 |
| Hands | Baton-style main handset with thin lume plots. Chronograph Seconds Hand: Chrome arrow tip. Sub-Dial Hands: Chrome |
| Lume | Hour and minute hands only |
| Bracelet/Strap | Integrated nylon strap design with Velcro. Padded construction with genuine calfskin leather underlayer. Wrist Fit: 6.3 inches to 7.1 inches. Black nylon strap with red stitching or red canvas strap with black stitching |
| Clasp | Minimalist carbon fiber clasp |
| Caseback | Screw-down caseback secured by four visible screws near the corners under the lugs |
| Water Resistance | 30m |
| Approx. Price | $400 |




























