Nato Straps - whats the deal?

Nato Straps - whats the deal?

Author
Discussion

prand

Original Poster:

5,916 posts

197 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
Hi all, I was considering buying a NATO strap for an old watch I found in a drawer. Doing so it got me thinking.

What is the purpose of such a strap - especially the military connection by its name, and the syle of watch it's usually attached to?

I've always had a feeling it was that they were popular with soldiers as the strap would snap or release if you get it caught in a rufty tufty combat situation. Apparently, the last thing you want is being left dangling by the stainless steel bracelet on your wrist when jumping out of a tank or helicopter.

However, these straps seem tough, and the weakest link looks like he watches spring pins that the strap loops through (or even your wrist), so if you were to snag the watch while hand to hand fighting with the Taliban, then your prized and potentially life saving watch would ping off into a nearby sand dune, leaving you with a £5 strap attached to your wrist.

Or, is it, in reality, like most things watch related, just a fashion thing...?

Chairman LMAO

666 posts

196 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
If we ignore your list of extenuating circumstances and highly unlikely sequence of events;

- Cheap
- Easy to repace (no pins to remove)
- Reliable closing method
- Comfortable

What more do you want?

StevenJJ

541 posts

210 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
The deal is that it loops through both watch pins so if one pin breaks you don't lose the watch.

prand

Original Poster:

5,916 posts

197 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
StevenJJ said:
The deal is that it loops through both watch pins so if one pin breaks you don't lose the watch.
Yes, hadn't thought of that one that makes a lot of practical sense. I guess if this happens in the field you can still fashion a sort of nurses' watch with the strap closed and attached upside down to the front of your jacket!

I'd still be worried about catching my strap while exiting an APC, though like the poster says above its highly unlikely, as in combat gear you would be covered in webbing loops, belts and bags etc so you'd be more likely to catch yourself on a part of your equipment clothing than a thin strap on your wrist.

Cheers! Might treat myself to a nice "James Bond"

sneijder

5,221 posts

235 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all


I have the upper one on this picture (not my picture, mine has s/s bits), I ordered a Rhino as they seem to have a bit more 'oomph' about them. The strap passes twice under the body of my watch, not sure if this is the case with a NATO.

So much better than the rubber strap that was on my Seiko.

whoami

13,151 posts

241 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
prand said:
Hi all, I was considering buying a NATO strap for an old watch I found in a drawer. Doing so it got me thinking.

What is the purpose of such a strap - especially the military connection by its name, and the syle of watch it's usually attached to?

I've always had a feeling it was that they were popular with soldiers as the strap would snap or release if you get it caught in a rufty tufty combat situation. Apparently, the last thing you want is being left dangling by the stainless steel bracelet on your wrist when jumping out of a tank or helicopter.

However, these straps seem tough, and the weakest link looks like he watches spring pins that the strap loops through (or even your wrist), so if you were to snag the watch while hand to hand fighting with the Taliban, then your prized and potentially life saving watch would ping off into a nearby sand dune, leaving you with a £5 strap attached to your wrist.

Or, is it, in reality, like most things watch related, just a fashion thing...?
They are the quickest way to spoil a nice watch.

redtwin

7,518 posts

183 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
I still can't figure out why they are called NATO. Were they initially issued to NATO forces?.

okgo

38,182 posts

199 months

Tuesday 11th August 2009
quotequote all
whoami said:
prand said:
Hi all, I was considering buying a NATO strap for an old watch I found in a drawer. Doing so it got me thinking.

What is the purpose of such a strap - especially the military connection by its name, and the syle of watch it's usually attached to?

I've always had a feeling it was that they were popular with soldiers as the strap would snap or release if you get it caught in a rufty tufty combat situation. Apparently, the last thing you want is being left dangling by the stainless steel bracelet on your wrist when jumping out of a tank or helicopter.

However, these straps seem tough, and the weakest link looks like he watches spring pins that the strap loops through (or even your wrist), so if you were to snag the watch while hand to hand fighting with the Taliban, then your prized and potentially life saving watch would ping off into a nearby sand dune, leaving you with a £5 strap attached to your wrist.

Or, is it, in reality, like most things watch related, just a fashion thing...?
They are the quickest way to spoil a nice watch.
+1 IMO.

A nice leather or tastefull rubber strap is a far better bet imo. Although the price of a NATO you can't winge!

Maxf

8,409 posts

242 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Im a big fan of nato straps - Ive had all of my watches on various colour nato straps before, aside from my dress watch (which would look a bit silly). Speedmasters, Planet Ocean, Submariner, Seadweller, seiko 007, etc.

It makes them look more rugged and less posey - which is what I like about them. My favourite combo is a tatty green nato on a pepsi dial gmt - something very 'reverse snobbery' about how it looks.

Nolar Dog

8,786 posts

196 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Anyone got a link/recommendation where I can buy one online please?

Also anyone have an AstroAvia of any description on a NATO?

Thanks smile

whoami

13,151 posts

241 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Nolar Dog said:
Anyone got a link/recommendation where I can buy one online please?

Also anyone have an AstroAvia of any description on a NATO?

Thanks smile
http://www.timefactors.com/nato.htm

If you really must smile

Nolar Dog

8,786 posts

196 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Merci beaucoup whoami smile

beer

ascayman

12,764 posts

217 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
why would anyone do this to a half decent watch????

they look awful and cheap and are the perfect way to ruin a nice watch. all in my humble opinion of course.

happy to be proved wrong if anyone can show me a decent example?

Spice_Weasel

2,286 posts

254 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
prand said:
Hi all, I was considering buying a NATO strap for an old watch I found in a drawer. Doing so it got me thinking.

What is the purpose of such a strap - especially the military connection by its name, and the syle of watch it's usually attached to?

I've always had a feeling it was that they were popular with soldiers as the strap would snap or release if you get it caught in a rufty tufty combat situation. Apparently, the last thing you want is being left dangling by the stainless steel bracelet on your wrist when jumping out of a tank or helicopter.

However, these straps seem tough, and the weakest link looks like he watches spring pins that the strap loops through (or even your wrist), so if you were to snag the watch while hand to hand fighting with the Taliban, then your prized and potentially life saving watch would ping off into a nearby sand dune, leaving you with a £5 strap attached to your wrist.

Or, is it, in reality, like most things watch related, just a fashion thing...?
The weakest point of any watch strap / bracelet is likely to be any one of the springbar pins that fasten it to the watch lugs, or in the case of bracelets, pins that actually hold the bracelet links together. NATO straps were designed to be used with military-issue watches which, more often than not, had fixed bars set between the lugs, rather than springbars. The NATO strap was originally the standard watch strap issued by the British Ministry of Defence. Called the "G10" by members of the British military because of the form used to requisition the strap (and other items) from inventory, the reason it got its "NATO" name is because the strap has a NSN or NATO Stock Number which identifies this type of strap.

Nowadays you can buy NATO-style straps from various suppliers.

ShadownINja

76,442 posts

283 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Nolar Dog said:
Anyone got a link/recommendation where I can buy one online please?

Also anyone have an AstroAvia of any description on a NATO?

Thanks smile

Nolar Dog

8,786 posts

196 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Oooh thank you very much Ninja!

I like that a lot.
I think I'll get one for my S1 to "facelift" it a bit.



ShadownINja

76,442 posts

283 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
It certainly makes it feel more substantial than the original leather strap did.

Nolar Dog

8,786 posts

196 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Yes, the OE leather strap isn't great (to say the least!) is it.

ShadownINja

76,442 posts

283 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Nope, that's the strange thing. For a little bit more money, they could have supplied a decent strap; the one on my Tri-phase is very nice considering the price. It's the only watch I haven't thought, "That needs a better strap."

prand

Original Poster:

5,916 posts

197 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
quotequote all
Spice_Weasel said:
prand said:
Hi all, I was considering buying a NATO strap for an old watch I found in a drawer. Doing so it got me thinking.

What is the purpose of such a strap - especially the military connection by its name, and the syle of watch it's usually attached to?

I've always had a feeling it was that they were popular with soldiers as the strap would snap or release if you get it caught in a rufty tufty combat situation. Apparently, the last thing you want is being left dangling by the stainless steel bracelet on your wrist when jumping out of a tank or helicopter.

However, these straps seem tough, and the weakest link looks like he watches spring pins that the strap loops through (or even your wrist), so if you were to snag the watch while hand to hand fighting with the Taliban, then your prized and potentially life saving watch would ping off into a nearby sand dune, leaving you with a £5 strap attached to your wrist.

Or, is it, in reality, like most things watch related, just a fashion thing...?
The weakest point of any watch strap / bracelet is likely to be any one of the springbar pins that fasten it to the watch lugs, or in the case of bracelets, pins that actually hold the bracelet links together. NATO straps were designed to be used with military-issue watches which, more often than not, had fixed bars set between the lugs, rather than springbars. The NATO strap was originally the standard watch strap issued by the British Ministry of Defence. Called the "G10" by members of the British military because of the form used to requisition the strap (and other items) from inventory, the reason it got its "NATO" name is because the strap has a NSN or NATO Stock Number which identifies this type of strap.

Nowadays you can buy NATO-style straps from various suppliers.
Oh thanks for that. Answers my question perfectly.