CITIZEN Eco-Drive
Discussion
Solar powered. Need a new capacitor every 10(?) years, I understand. At least with normal battery-powered watches you can change the battery yourself every 2-3 years for a £1.23 battery from Maplin. Suspect you'd have to risk paying someone £20 on ebay or sending it away to Citizen. Same goes for Seiko Kinetics, Casio Tough Solars, etc. They will bin the dead capacitor so not very environmentally friendly when you think about it. I suppose you could google for "change eco-drive capacitor" and you might find a way of doing it but it might be tricky or involve soldering (would google but CBA). That's my current thinking on such watches. Oh, I suppose you could bin the watch in 10 years' time.
Edited by ShadownINja on Sunday 1st November 17:57
I've got one, and I'm happy with it. If left in the dark, it stops, and then wakes up again when exposed to light, and this can happen under your shirt cuff from time to time.
Occasionally it suddenly loses an hour or so without reason, and needs resetting, but otherwise, I can't really fault it.
£400 well spent IMO. Here's mine:

Occasionally it suddenly loses an hour or so without reason, and needs resetting, but otherwise, I can't really fault it.
£400 well spent IMO. Here's mine:

Edited by Doofus on Sunday 1st November 22:22
Edited by Doofus on Sunday 1st November 22:24
HereBeMonsters said:
Well if we're doing Eco-Drive porn:
This one gets a lot of wrist time:

Big, but light as it's the titanium one.
I have one of these incoming from the Netherlands and should be here this week - although mine is the steel version. Have been after one for a while and missed out on a couple over the last few months, but managed to bag on at a very good price.This one gets a lot of wrist time:

Big, but light as it's the titanium one.
CmdrBond said:
HereBeMonsters said:
I have one of these incoming from the Netherlands and should be here this week - although mine is the steel version. Have been after one for a while and missed out on a couple over the last few months, but managed to bag on at a very good price.I did try a steel one on in a shop, and it is nice and chunky, the weight makes it feel like a totally different watch on the wrist. Enjoy!

HereBeMonsters said:
smartie said:
always fancied a Citizen but they all seem a little 'fussy' somehow?
ALL?
ETA - Found it - Eco-Drive 180, just over a ton.
Edited by andy_s on Monday 2nd November 10:20
What drugs are you on?
http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/partNumber/2...
Not sure it's the same model... the date is wrong.
http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/partNumber/2...
Not sure it's the same model... the date is wrong.

Edited by ShadownINja on Monday 2nd November 14:26
sjg said:
I bought my gf a titanium eco-drive for christmas last year. No problems - as long as it's exposed to light for at least part of the day it will go on running.
I did an experiment on my chrono. Left it in a drawer for a week and it was still running perfectly. You can tell if it's running out as the second hand ticks every two seconds rather than every one.Some of the more expensive ones have a "hibernate" feature as well. It will eventually stop the hands moving, but still keep time in the movement. When exposed to light it will charge back up and reset itself to the correct time.
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