@@BorisVodka you might have seen it but not recognized it because it don’t look gold here, but this is the moonshine gold. It’s omega’s paler gold but usually still noticeably yellow gold. In some lighting it looks like steel or white gold. I thought this one was steel until I couldn’t find it, but I did find another minutemon short on the moonshine gold
It can also measure literally anything in an hour. I had to assemble a bunch of boxes and put things in them, but was procrastinating because i thought it would take me forever to do. I got my chronograph and timed myself doing one and figured out it would take me like a quarter of the time i anticipated. It's actually a surprisingly handy function
@@SmD-ff5xd100% Guy is literally desperate to make an excuse for a useless "feature", to justify his watch. But the kind of person who can't learn to multiply or divide wouldn't get that.
I've been resisting speedmaster so HARD telling myself that watch isn't water resistance enough, as if I ever go deep diving, but God that green dial is beautiful.
If you like having a backup watch while diving there are literally hundreds of other options, but if you wanted to dive with it, it is water resistant to 167 feet. Rec diving is capped at 130 feet. Do you regularly dive deeper than this??
You can use it to count pulsation/beats. Start the pusher and count the beats then stop the pusher when it reach 60 beats. It shows how many beats per minute.
What beats? Like music beats? What you just described would actually measure the inverse of beats per unit time, it will tell you how much time it took 60 beats to occur not how many beats occurred in a minute.
I learned how to use a tachometer just because I wanted to know how to do it, but I’ve never had any reason to use it for any practical purpose… I have a split time tachometer watch that I’ve used 2×2 different dishes while cooking dinner! I did take one chronograph on a recreational dive just for fun, but I wouldn’t dare actually use the pushers!
It can also be used to measure distance if the object you’re tracking is running at a fixed speed of at least 60 mph or 60 kph or whatever. Once the hand is pointing to that number on the tachymeter stop it and you’ll know the object had gone the distance you’re looking for.
Works exactly the same with Miles. Used to measure the speed of an object over a fixed distance, period. If it goes one mile in one minute, its going 60 mph (works on the bezel). If it goes 1km in 1 minute, its going 60 kph (also works on the bezel).
I've owned several chronographs some with tachymeter scale around the bezel and I don't think I've ever used the stopwatch or tachymeter functions. Without my reading glasses on I can't see any of it clearly anyway. Now I wear a 44mm Seamaster Planet Ocean 600m, big, bold and beautiful with no unnecessary functions, I love it.
Ciao Giuseppe, raramente commento video su youtube. Devo dire che il vostro splendido lavoro merita sia commenti che like che supporti economici. Ancora una volta ci avete aperto una finestra sul mondo dandoci la possibilità di vedere com'è la vita là fuori. E non vedo niente di buono. È solo un caso se siamo nati nella parte "giusta" del mondo. Bravi, continuate così.
But its soo usable though and interesting to see how much time passes doing daily tasks, like waiting in line at disneyland, how long it took you to finish your meal, etc. Gives a new perspective
@@DistraughtpanA stopwatch? Another method is: when you get in the line, instead of using a stopwatch look at the time. Then simply subtract that from the time at the end 2 hours later or whatever, then you can figure out "hey, we've been in this line 2 hours". Also works for car trips.
Frankly i didnt know how to use the outer bezel 😅 i use mine to measure time from point A to B or how long time of a specific thing lasts. Anyways its awesome to learn thanks 👍
Some additional facts about the tachymeter: 1. There's a complication found in early-mid century chronographs like the Tissot Janeiro called a spiral tachymeter. You can calculate speed (slower than 60km/h) for intervals longer than a minute 2. You can also calculate how many units of something can be completed in an hour. It's calculated by 3600/n, where n = chronograph seconds
I came to the comments just because of the green speedy, then I realize a ton of people have the same comment. Never seen that one, that has to be my favorite dial on a speedy.
Merci ça fait plaisir de voir une vidéo dans ce sens j’ai tout perdu récemment ma boîte mon entourage mes addictions et petits plaisirs et je sors d une session hp fort divertissante et je me rend compte qu a part manger et dormir en sécurité rien n a vraiment d’importance on est pas différent des humains d il y a 100’000 ans parce que des couillons faibles nous font croire le contraire
I have no clue how to use it , it just looks cool … I don’t even use my watch to check time, I use my iPhone for that … wrist watch is pretty much obsolete now days , it’s just a piece of jewelry…you can pay $50.000 for it , and it can’t even take a picture lol
You can also start stop watch when see something happen far and stop when you hear it and the number would be the distance between you and what you saw
you can also time how long it took you to travel a certain distance and know the avg speed. like if it took you 19 mins to travel 15km you can know your avg speed.