Post #390,884
6/17/14 5:21:56 PM
|
I routinely wear automatics
And even my quartz watches set and power themselves (Casio toughsolar waveceptors).
Both Bulova and Seiko have watches that have a perfectly smooth sweeping second hand - the Precisionist and Spring Drive movements, respectively.
If you've never seen such a thing, well. The smooth sweep is hypnotic. Almost as good as the extra pause given at 12 o'clock by the second hand of a Mondaine railway clock and the watches it spawned.
|
Post #390,890
6/17/14 6:09:52 PM
|
My last watch was a Citizen Eco-Drive.
A solar cell that keeps an electronic watch charged. It's a great idea that worked well. J has one too. I had to get the capacitor replaced in hers (it wouldn't keep running), but it wasn't too bad. I think I mentioned before that I stopped wearing mine after messing up the date on a leap year and I couldn't easily figure out how to fix it. (It was a chronograph and one had to use the various buttons and dials in the right sequence at the right time of day to make the right changes for the right year. I didn't bother to try to find the manual for it.) I then realized I always had a phone with me, or could easily-enough estimate the ballpark time, so I stopped wearing it. It's nice having a uniform skin color on my left arm for the first time since I was a kid. ;-) If I ever get the bug to wear a (non-smart) watch again, I'll probably consider something like a Citizen Perpetual AT that takes care of the calendar and time-zone stuff automatically, too. Cheers, Scott.
|
Post #390,899
6/17/14 8:23:03 PM
|
I have one now.
I got it for Christmas after my last watch went bad (gunked up and shock from when I didn't take it off before hitting things probably harder than I should have.) It assumes I know the day and year and does not have the temerity to remind me. They go by fast enough without cheerleading. I do have a bunch of cute (analog) dials to let me time things, but I've gotten in the habit of counting the squares on the oscilloscope when I'm interested in timing accuracy. It's a nice watch and I don't have to change the batteries, which means it won't get gunked up or less water resistant. If it lasts 20 years like my last watch did, I probably won't really care what the exact time is...
"Religion, n. A daughter of Hope and Fear, explaining to Ignorance the nature of the Unknowable." ~ AMBROSE BIERCE (1842-1914)
|
Post #390,901
6/17/14 8:29:22 PM
|
:-)
|
Post #390,921
6/18/14 2:58:44 AM
|
If I had to keep just one watch for ever and ever
say, in the zombie apocalypse, it'd be this one: Solar-powered. Radio-controlled. Indestructible. Waterproof.
|
Post #390,977
6/19/14 5:48:13 PM
|
Blood and Zombie head goo proof?
-- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec
|
Post #391,002
6/19/14 11:42:37 PM
|
Yep
It is not unheard of for G-Shock owners who are selling to prep the watch for its new owner by putting it through the dishwasher.
|
Post #390,920
6/18/14 2:56:02 AM
|
Yeah, perpetual is the way forward for calendars.
I have one of these: Bit of an arse to set, but once it's done, it's done. The G-Shocks do all that, of course, and also look after DST transitions, too.
|
Post #390,923
6/18/14 4:30:41 AM
|
Pity that it's a ƒail..
If it won't tell me the name of Today, forcing me to pay attention to a time-sequence.. well,
(Besides, a few weeks of nuclear winter? there goes the capacitor charge: it also lacks the world's teensiest |---| crank, for just that situation.)
|
Post #390,925
6/18/14 7:23:50 AM
|
Ahh. DST, also too. Clever.
I guess that since it refers to the WWVB timekeepers, there's no risk of it becoming obsolete if Congress changes when DST starts and ends, or they add a leap second, or whatever.
Adjusting a watch manually for DST wasn't too annoying for me, but leap days were always a pain on the Citizens I had. They had a 12 month calendar, which was normally great, but that one day every 4 years...
I did like mine a lot (I still have it - probably should get it working...) - one thing I wish it had was brighter phosphor spots for the dark. Even with all their models, it was hard to find one that was a reasonably small size that had all the features I "needed".
Cheers, Scott.
|