> The bracelet is of course provided for Bear Paws. Did I be shortened by watchmaker, which cost me a whopping 5. Keep removed members that you can never buy more again. And not too hard to adjust: First, the wrist can get pretty swell, and secondly, the clock has ingeniously balancing and anti-slip Kunststoffflappen at the transitions from the body to the wrist, so that the housing is not wandering even with loose strap.
> The instruction manual is typical of Japanese hypertext without clicking: Instead of comprehensive information on a function to be able to, you have to gather by scrolling the information. What I've always hated in Casio watches, because I can not handle it or want is the "Hold down the A and C keys simultaneously and switch with the E key ...". However, this has given way to a Western menu structure. In addition, you can always escape "normal" time display via a kind of reset button is pressed in the.
> Baro, and Alti thermometer and compass I've seen yet unspecified, but assume that the technology has not deteriorated over the last 15 years at least. Even then you could use the thermometer with display in 1/10 ° as a reliable thermometer. New and ingenious of multifunctional second hand, is Ex .: If one is oriented as hikers on contour lines, you had earlier behirnen the very "brittle" miniature digital display. Now showing at the request of the second hand in 5- (or optional 50) meter increments the altitude gain at a glance on the yellow display sheet.
> Perhaps the putative Zeitzonenlünette is a zone time display in truth. It is 30teilig, and you therefore can not see at a glance what time it is just in Jakarta. The interested anyway anyone. LON (don) is to the right of UTC, because there's in LON (Don) DST. Thought that is contrary to spend time abroad, where you can read the time very normal, and multifunctional second hand on request reveals, in what time zone you move straight. Might not work for Russia, there it was decided in fact only last Pirogovo, all year to stay in the summer time.
> I wanted a clock, for whatever reason. This clock synchronizes polyglot with all major time signal transmitters, but I only need the DCF77 in Mainflingen. This seems to work, even though I'm away in Vienna with more than 610km of the Casio (not Mainflinen) guaranteed 500km. Without radio receiver indicates the operating manual +/- 15s per month, which is also quite decent.
> The built-in (replaceable) battery is charging 3 states: H (igh), M (edium) and L (ow), the clock moves back still functions at the bottom, to save power. 8 min blazing sunshine to provide for about half a year "normal operation". Whoever believes's, ia is blessed, but while I wrote this review, my desk lamp has the (so to speak something like power reserve) of M (the clock was safely in a dark storage) returned to H. The automatic lighting - if you ablesenwollend tilts the wrist by more than 40 ° - turns noisy operating instructions only one, when it's dark. But according to the old joke from the refrigerator lighting I did not want to have to know what is going on while hiking under my sleeve or when sleeping in a tent. This does not need a man, but there is a separate light button. If not, disabled like me anyway, I recommend turning off.