Wrist watch???

Maxmosbey

Final Approach
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I need to get serious.
It is raining and I'm bored. How many people still wear wrist watches? I have one in my flight bag and I slip it on when I go flying. I'm not exactly sure why I think that I need one when I fly. Otherwise I haven't worn one for years. Two things in my case, time isn't that important, and I can always pull out my cell phone and check the time if it is.
 
Wrist watches, bah! I wear pocket watches. Today's watch was made in 1923, has 21 jewel movement and keeps perfect time.
 
I wear one.

Now, how can we make this thread political? :D
 
Did you know that part of the ''Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act'' is a 17% tax on wrist watches set to go into effect on Jan 1st! ! ! ! ! :hairraise:
 
Did you know that part of the ''Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act'' is a 17% tax on wrist watches set to go into effect on Jan 1st! ! ! ! ! :hairraise:
Dammit...Government meddling again. Picking winners-and-losers in the market. By taxing wrist-watches, they're unfairly helping pocket watch and clock manufacturers! Big Timex strikes again1:incazzato:
 
I still wear one. A Rolex Submariner in stainless and gold with a sapphire blue dial face
Now, how can we make this thread political? :D
My watch is what the elitist corporate Wall Street robber barons wear. Of course they probably bought their with TARP bailout funds from that they got from their Republican lapdogs in Washington DC. :D:D


How was that Bill? :thumbsup:
 
I still wear one. A Rolex Submariner in stainless and gold with a sapphire blue dial faceMy watch is what the elitist corporate Wall Street robber barons wear. Of course they probably bought their with TARP bailout funds from that they got from their Republican lapdogs in Washington DC. :D:D


How was that Bill? :thumbsup:

A stopped wristwatch is better than polarized political pundits in the media: a stopped watch iis at least correct twice a day.....
 
A stopped wristwatch is better than polarized political pundits in the media: a stopped watch iis at least correct twice a day.....

Notice your "populist" sentiments of late. Some of those polarized pundits are just advocating adhearance to the Constitution and intent of the Founding Fathers. Are they now considered extremists? Is wanting the Constitution to actually mean something polarizing?
 
Notice your "populist" sediments of late. Some of those polarized pundits are just advocating adhearance to the Constitution and intent of the Founding Fathers. Are they now considered extremists? Is wanting the Constitution to actually mean something polarizing?

Populist? No, not at all.

Just noting that neither left nor right hold the franchise on outlandish statements or behavior. And a bit tired of the imperiousness adopted by either side. Just paint me a GDI.... more libertarian than anything else.
 
Notice your "populist" sentiments of late. Some of those polarized pundits are just advocating adhearance to the Constitution and intent of the Founding Fathers. Are they now considered extremists? Is wanting the Constitution to actually mean something polarizing?
Nice to see you supporting those that are not for the banning of a religious center near Ground Zero and for gay marriage. There just might be hope for you yet as you distance yourself from those radical tenthers and birthers.
 
It is raining and I'm bored. How many people still wear wrist watches? I have one in my flight bag and I slip it on when I go flying. I'm not exactly sure why I think that I need one when I fly. Otherwise I haven't worn one for years. Two things in my case, time isn't that important, and I can always pull out my cell phone and check the time if it is.

I wear a watch. I'm able to use it on the airplane, during taxi,
take-off, and landing even.
 
Why are we not required to turn off our digital wrist watches during takeoff and landing on commercial airlines?

Seems to fit in with the other intelligent decisions, like turning off MP3 players and cameras.
 
I haven't worn a wrist watch for over 20 years. Just ahead of my time, I guess.
 
Why are we not required to turn off our digital wrist watches during takeoff and landing on commercial airlines?
Because they don't have on/off buttons.

Seems to fit in with the other intelligent decisions, like turning off MP3 players and cameras.
OMG your iPhone is on. WE ARE GONNA CRASH!!!!!! ppfffftttt!!!!!
 
Because they don't have on/off buttons.

OMG your iPhone is on. WE ARE GONNA CRASH!!!!!! ppfffftttt!!!!!

I had a passenger freak out on me for sending a text from my phone during takeoff a few flights back. He got really nervous as soon as I pulled it out, and was like "Psst....man, that's supposed to be off." I gave him a look that said "shut up" and he immediately hit the call button right as we were rotating.

Funny enough, I never turn off my phone. I simply turn the screen off instead.
 
I had a passenger freak out on me for sending a text from my phone during takeoff a few flights back. He got really nervous as soon as I pulled it out, and was like "Psst....man, that's supposed to be off." I gave him a look that said "shut up" and he immediately hit the call button right as we were rotating.

Funny enough, I never turn off my phone. I simply turn the screen off instead.

Wow that is really unsafe!!! Not only could you interfere with the instruments but the LiION batteries could explode!!! You are danger to society man!! :D:D:D
 
Stopped wearing wrist watches ~15 years ago. My wrist takes a beating and I'd break watch after watch. Besides, I just use my cell since it's always got the right time.
 
It is raining and I'm bored. How many people still wear wrist watches? I have one in my flight bag and I slip it on when I go flying. I'm not exactly sure why I think that I need one when I fly. Otherwise I haven't worn one for years. Two things in my case, time isn't that important, and I can always pull out my cell phone and check the time if it is.

Ironically, there was an article on the Denver Post website this morning containing a list published by some private school about things that are different for each class.

One of the things for this year's class was "never wore wristwatches."

As to myself, I'd wear one, but I've lost every single one I've ever had.
 
We tried so hard to keep it there too!!! :(

President Obama wears a watch:
BarackObama-watches-thumb-450x592-2142.jpg


Discuss amongst yourselves.
 
Earlier this summer someone asked me what time it was. I said June. It was July. Apparently the middle of July from their comments. I looked at the sky and said it was mid afternoon sometime and that's close enough. They were irritated because they thought I was goofing on them. I was absolutely serious. I didn't know what month it was, much less time to the nearest tenth of a second.

I have a fun wrist watch with an altimeter and everything. I use it when flying which hasn't been in a while. The only other time is when running shows in the theatre where I have to know what time to start things. Even then I use the house manager as a timer and a stopwatch to keep things running on time.
 
Still wear a wristwatch today.

So do I, and am always being asked, by people who don't wear one, what time it is. Our society is heavily dependent on accurate time and I have no idea why someone wouldn't wear one, at least when they're at work.

I've even had flight students ask me if they can borrow my watch. We tell them up front to get one, as the regs require "an accurate, functioning timepiece." And cellphones don't work in many of the areas we fly.

Dan
 
I wear one for a couple reasons. One - I've always worn one and would miss being able to glance at it. Two - on a boat I don't have a cell phone or other time reference, and there are a lot of reasons to keep track of time.

And I wear a Timex Ironman because it is budget priced (watches tend to end up on the bottom of a lake) and it has a countdown / repeat timer mode that I need for starting races.
 
I used to wear a watch, but the strap on my watch broke and I haven't gotten around to fixing it. Several times I've wished I had it on and someday I'm intending to get the strap fixed and resume wearing it.

This thread reminded me... Has anyone else noticed that there seem to be a disproportionally large number of watch advertisements in aviation magazines? Is there something about pilots and watches that I don't know?
 
This thread reminded me... Has anyone else noticed that there seem to be a disproportionally large number of watch advertisements in aviation magazines? Is there something about pilots and watches that I don't know?
yep. only the coolest and most awesome pilots will wear really big wrist watches. :cornut:
 
Citizen Eco-Drive Skyhawk. And, yes, I have used the E6-B around the dial while flying. :D

Remember, the wrist watch was invented for flying. It's perfectly natural that pilots would wear one.
 
Remember, the wrist watch was invented for flying.
Nope, they weren't

SOURCE: In 1880 Constant Girard (Girard-Perregaux) develops a concept of wristwatches, made for German naval officers and ordered by Kaiser Wilhelm I of Germany. Two-thousand watches were produced, which represents the first important commercialization of wristwatches. Anyhow, for civilian the wristwatches were not popular among men.

At the beginning of the century wristwatches were mostly worn by women. In 1904, Brazilian aviator Alberto Santos Dumont asked his friend Louis Cartier to come up with an alternative that would allow him to keep both hands on the controls while timing his performances during flight. Cartier and his master watchmaker, Edmond Jaeger soon came up with the first prototype for a man's wristwatch called the Santos wristwatch. The Santos first went on sale in 1911, the date of Cartier's first production of wristwatches.


During the First World War soldiers needed access to their watches while their hands were full. They were given wristwatches, called 'trench watches', which were made with pocketwatch movements, so they were large and bulky and had the crown at the 12 o'clock position like pocketwatches. After the war pocketwatches went out of fashion and by 1930 the ratio of wrist- to pocketwatches was 50 to 1. The first successful self-winding system was invented by John Harwood in 1923.
 
I wear a 30.00 Avon wrist watch. Two time zones, the hands are local and the digital is Zulu.
 
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