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I've had the Suunto for a few years, and it works great. When I was
doing my PPL, I was shopping around for a handy watch that had easy-to-use timers, etc. I studied every "pilot" watch out there, concluding the displays were WAY too small to see while bouncing around in the plane, or at night (actually, I know a few ATP's, and NONE of them wear a "pilot" watch). It finally dawned on me that I already HAD the perfect watch for flying: the Suunto. Big display, easy to use timer, back-lighting, and of course, a useful altimeter. Cheers, Scott . com... K i t W â l k e r wrote in message . .. Slightly OT but has anyone ever used a Suunto watch while flying? I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. I've been wearing a Suunto for about 4 yrs. now. It is a surprisingly reliable watch (although it's BIG). The altimeter function is very accurate and has come in handy in the airplane. Once as a tie-breaker when the altimeter and encoder didn't agree and just a few weeks ago when I had the misfortune of having little bugs invade my pitot/static system. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Military watches | Ray | Military Aviation | 4 | July 8th 04 11:46 PM |