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Pulsar Men's Tech Gear Flight Computer Watch #PM7001
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| List Price |
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$250.00 |
| Our Price |
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$250.00 |
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| Availability |
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Currently Unavailable |
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| Editorial Reviews: | |  |  | | This men's stainless steel, Pulsar Tech Gear watch features a black digital/analog dial with yellow enamel markers, luminous hands, month/day/date calendar and twoalarms. The watch also has world time with 77 cities and 4 US time zones. |  |  | | Pulsar balances technological innovation with streamlined design in its PM7001 Tech Gear Flight Computer watch, which features a large bold black face which features an EL backlight function and both analog and digital displays. The watch displays the time for 77 cities and 4 U.S. time zones--perfect for the man on the go. The black anodized bezel includes a bidirectional E6B pilot's slide rule. This watch contains a chronograph with two alarms and the 1/100 stopwatch feature records elapsed time up to 24 hours. The tapered bracelet band is composed of interlinked stainless steel pieces. Other features include day, date, and month display, screwdown caseback, luminous hands, water resistance to 100 meters (330 feet), a scratch-resistant mineral crystal, and precise Japanese quartz movement. It measures 1.6 inches in diameter and 0.5 inches thick. Warranty Pulsar's three-year warranty (from date of purchase) covers all of the watch--inside and out. All moving parts, the case, crystal, bracelet, and battery are covered. |  |
| Custom Reviews: | |
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| Do ya got one in a Brail version? | |
|  | I bought this thing for the slide rule bevil. You know, for figuring distances to a target. Trouble is, when I bought it I could see it. Well, I could see it with my cheaters on. Now I can't get the batteries changed, which ain't nuthin to gripe about considering I live in the boonies, and I can't see the bevil with two pairs of cheaters and the bottom of a broke out coke bottle. I can always blow a smoke screen and say I got the watch for figuing distance for shooting a rifle, but I've had to go to the real big Slide Rule instead. All seriousness aside...excellent watch! It gets my mark.
| | Great price, not a great timekeeper. | |
|  | Good: Price!, Features - everything that makes this an aviator watch including what HAD been missing from the Citizen models... a light!
Bad: How simply can I put this... It keeps horrible time. I had to get a new time-hack every week. And annoyingly, the digital seconds never match the sweep hand; True, to most wearers those 10-15 seconds lost/week makes little difference but if you're responsible for time control to the second, you care. (And yes, I tried a new battery)
| |  | The watch is nice. Always getting asked to see it by others. After purchase I had to replace the battery. Oh ya it has two of them. One for the digital and the other for the analog. You notice when a battery goes bad when the times become further apart. With new batteries no problem with keeping both on current times. The watch has every feature necessary including a cool back light which is green (not a eye blinding indiglo). I have owned this watch for almost a year now and still like it.
| |  | I like the watch. It has a nice "curb appeal". The black/silver metallic strap is really catchy. But the battery life is poor. I had to change the battery within 6 months. It supposedly comes with a 3 year warranty (batteries included). But the cost to ship the watch to Pulsar/Seiko is more than what a local jeweler will charge to replace the battery. Plus, one would be without a watch for 2-3 weeks minimum if you ship it out.
| | after 18 months it's dead | |
|  | I liked this watch for the first year. It had little flakinesses, but did what I wanted and wasn't terribly expensive. But recently the buttons got too sticky to work any longer. I can't adjust it without a pair of pliers to pull the buttons back out after pressing them. Then yesterday the analog hands just stopped. I can't get them going again. Possible the battery is low, but the digital portion is going fine and it's not old enough that the battery should be going. I'm going back to Casio's products, which always lasted me at least twice this long.
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