So I am very particular about watches. Not about the looks, mind you. No, I care about their prime function: keeping time. This preoccupation started when I received a Junghans Mega 1 as a birthday gift, back in 1990. This was the first radio controlled wrist watch in the world. It synced itself once a day using radio waves with a transmitter in Frankfurt Germany. This radio transmitter was hooked to an atomic clock. It does not get much more precise than that! Unfortunately it had a couple of downsides. The first being that you had to be within a 1200 km range of Frankfurt, Germany. I live in the Netherlands, so that was in range of the transmitter. But the very first summer I owned the watch I went on vaction to the Bahamas. Alas, that is definitely out of range. When that happens the watch behaves as a 'normal' digital watch, it simply does not sync itself with the atomic reference clock in Frankfurt, Germany. The second downside was more serious. The Mega 1 has a leather strap which incorporates the aerial for radio reception. I happen to perspire a lot. So after a year or so, the leather strap was worn out. I ended up replacing this strap once every year for a couple of years. The cost of this was prohibitive, so I quit wearing the watch.
After that I received another birthday gift in 1998. A Seiko Kinetic Titanium watch. Cool! No more batteries and very allergy and perspiration resistant. I lost the time syncing capability, that was too bad. Another - related - downside of this watch is that it does not have a perpetual calender. Every 30 day month I have to advance the calender one day manually. Not to mention leap years...
So already in 1998 I envisioned the 'Ultimate Watch': It syncs itself to an atomic reference clock anywhere on earth (the fact that it does not work in outer space is acceptable for the time being), it does not need a battery (by using solar or kinetic energy) and the strap is made of Titanium (no perspiration woes for me).
Too bad nobody could make a watch like this forever. Until I saw this March 2012 announcement:
Meet the Seiko Astron GPS solar. Available in selected stores around the World from August 2012.
This wrist watch totally meets all of my requirements except for one. With a recommended consumer price of over 3000 euros it is prohibitively expensive. Oh well, I better start saving...
Once I really do own this watch I foresee another problem. I will need to go to Kathmandu, Nepal and find out if my watch really automatically syncs to official Nepal time, UTC+05:45. Yes that is 5 hours and 45 minutes ahead of Greenwich Mean Time.
On a side note
In the Junghans entry on Wikipedia it is mentioned that Junghans and Seiko are working together on a truly 'global' watch that knows about all the 39 official time zones on Earth. Aha...
Saturday, April 21. 2012
Ultimate Watch Quest over?
Posted by Jos van der Woude
in Technology
at
13:03
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