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#1
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What's the best wris****ch for a pilot?
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#2
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On May 13, 7:14*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
What's the best wris****ch for a pilot? It has Mickey Mouse on it pointing at the numbers... |
#3
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... What's the best wris****ch for a pilot? I dunno. I have a personal preference, but I wouldn't presume to speak for all pilots. |
#4
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... What's the best wris****ch for a pilot? I prefer to wear an alarm clock around my neck with a gold chain like Flavor Flav. |
#5
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On May 13, 8:01*am, "Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote:
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... What's the best wris****ch for a pilot? I prefer to wear an alarm clock around my neck with a gold chain like Flavor Flav. Sweet!!!! |
#6
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Mxsmanic wrote:
What's the best wris****ch for a pilot? No best really. Pilots usually prefer function and clarity over fancy design although my experience has been that these two things can be present at the same time. I seldom used or even needed a watch for navigation. I have noticed that some of the pilots I know who fly internationally favor watches that show different time zones while allowing them to keep their watches on GMT. I own a Brietling Chronograph that has lived upstairs unused for years (a gift) and next to that the Rolex Submariner that was my personal preference through most of my tenure as an active pilot. -- Dudley Henriques |
#7
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On 2008-05-13, Dudley Henriques wrote:
I seldom used or even needed a watch for navigation. I have noticed that some of the pilots I know who fly internationally favor watches that show different time zones while allowing them to keep their watches on GMT. I hauled off and bought a Citizen Skyhawk AT. Yeah, it's got all the fancy features on it, bu it's also got nice big hands, nice big hour marks, and can display the time in three time zones at once (two plus GMT). It's easy to change from one time zone to the next, something I use more than any other feature on the watch, and will set itself automagically from WWVB, DCF77, or JJY. All that means I know it's showing me the right time, and when I change time zones, it keeps doing so (because changing the time zone is independent of setting the watch). Getting the titanium version was purely consumption for its own sake, though. -- Jay Maynard, K5ZC http://www.conmicro.com http://jmaynard.livejournal.com http://www.tronguy.net Fairmont, MN (FRM) (Yes, that's me!) AMD Zodiac CH601XLi N55ZC (ordered 17 March, delivery 2 June) |
#8
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Jay Maynard wrote:
On 2008-05-13, Dudley Henriques wrote: I seldom used or even needed a watch for navigation. I have noticed that some of the pilots I know who fly internationally favor watches that show different time zones while allowing them to keep their watches on GMT. I hauled off and bought a Citizen Skyhawk AT. Yeah, it's got all the fancy features on it, bu it's also got nice big hands, nice big hour marks, and can display the time in three time zones at once (two plus GMT). It's easy to change from one time zone to the next, something I use more than any other feature on the watch, and will set itself automagically from WWVB, DCF77, or JJY. All that means I know it's showing me the right time, and when I change time zones, it keeps doing so (because changing the time zone is independent of setting the watch). Getting the titanium version was purely consumption for its own sake, though. Sounds like a fine watch. I've had offers of thousands of dollars for the Breitling and one of these days I'll let it go I guess. It has an E6B outer and inner bezel that I've never used. The thing weighs a ton. I wore it for a few days and took it off. That was 40 years ago I think. :-) -- Dudley Henriques |
#9
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"Jay Maynard" wrote in message
... On 2008-05-13, Dudley Henriques wrote: I seldom used or even needed a watch for navigation. I hauled off and bought a Citizen Skyhawk AT. I had a Casio that a friend of mine gave me. He got sick of me asking him what time it was. I wore it for fifteen years before I accidentally went swimming in Nantucket Sound with it on. The next day, I gave the rusty remnants a burial at sea. I went to Wal-Mart and picked up a $15 watch while I decided what watch to buy. Eight years later, I decided on a Casio Waveceptor. Solar powered, and automatically sets the time from the atomic clock in Ft Collins. Big numbers, and will turn on the light if you rotate your wrist 90 degrees, so you can turn it on with one hand. Two years later, I'm back to the Wal-Mart $15 watch. The battery in the Waveceptor won't hold a charge any more. I leave it in the window all weekend (While I wear the $15 one) and it often makes it until the next weekend before shutting down again. Skin cancer runs in my family, so I avoid the sun. That may be a large part of the problem. |
#10
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for you a simulated watch....
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... What's the best wris****ch for a pilot? |
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