I'm glad I did because I found out some new ways in which what you see in advertisements is not necessarily what you get, and I also found that what I though was important in theory wasn't always important in practice.
The first watch I tried:
Fossil Men's Chronograph Townsman Navy
$110 at Amazon.com
Unfortunately, this Fossil Townsman was horrible.
The hands, which look bright in the photo, are actually dark metal with a mirror finish. If they reflect something bright then you see them as bright. Otherwise, they disappear into the black of the face (which indeed looked black, even in direct sun, and not the dark navy blue described by Amazon's prose and photos). So I couldn 't read the time on the thing except in good circumstances. It was frustrating , so I returned it.
I did the same with the $125 light-cream colored version of the same watch that I'd bought at the same time, for the same reasons.
Running out of time to enjoy Amazon-US prices and selection before returning to Kyoto, I tried two more watches, and ended up keeping them.
The first is a $165 Stührling Original Symphony Eternity GMT ...
Nikon D4 + Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 — 1 / 500 sec, f /8, ISO 4500 — image data
Stührling Original Symphony Eternity GMT
The good:
- Easily readable across a wide range of lighting conditions, including dim.
- The face is not too small (42mm) and the case not too thick (13mm).
- Automatic: it has no batteries to need changing, and winds itself.
- A fairly simple, uncluttered face. (Photos make it look more busy than it really seems.)
- Has a name with an umlaüt. Makes it look old-world classy. Ümlaut means class, you know.
- Safe to swim with, so safe in the rain.
- I wish it was a bit bigger, much thinner, and had a cleaner design around the outside edge.
- Such a low price for an automatic (self-winding) watch brings worry about quality.
- The date and GMT boxes are too small/difficult to read even with glasses. I didn't even bother setting them.
- Luminescent features (hands and dots around the face) are worthless. Fireflys are an order of magnitude brighter.
I can read it in this photo I took for this post, though:
Nikon D4 + Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 — 1 / 500 sec, f /8, ISO 5000 — image data
It's advertised as water resistant to 50m (165 feet), which makes me feel I should be able to wear while swimming as deep as I could ever swim, but the manual says “ shallow water ” . This is apparently a well -established racket of inflated ratings used across the watch industry. Water resistant to “ 10 meters ” makes you think it's okay to shower or swim? Nope. The manual says such a rating means "withstand splashes of water while washing the hand, but should not be worn while swimming".
Once you learn the code you can understand what you're getting, but until then it seems wildly deceptive to me. But it seems to be a standard in the watch industry.
The other watch that I kept is the casual Citizen Eco Drive Black :
Nikon D4 + Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 — 1 / 500 sec, f /8, ISO 6400 — image data
Citizen Eco Drive Black
It's quite readable, but again, the luminescent features are worthless. When I was a kid you could literally read a book by the brightness from the luminescent hands of a kid's watch, but these days it's all worthless. Geez, a little radioactivity never hurt anyone.
This Citizen is the same size (42mm) as the Stührling, so I wish it were a bit bigger, but this one is less of a fashion statement. Not that I have much to do with fashion statements anyway. I can't read the date (so didn't bother setting it), but hey, 19~this one is water resistant to 100m! vedere di piu imitazioni rolex e Rolex Datejust II
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