What Altimeter / Barometer / Compass watch?
What Altimeter / Barometer / Compass watch?
Author
Discussion

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

259 months

Monday 1st November 2010
quotequote all
I'm after an "adventure" type watch with altimeter / barometer / compass type functions for cycling across Asia and later on the Americas and have been looking at the Suunto Core All Black on a leather strap



and various models in the Casio Pro Trek range including



and



and was wondering what people's experiences of any of them are.

I'm leaning towards the Core at the moment for it's sunset alarm and storm warning features which would both be useful for setting up camp before it's too dark or wet. Do either of the Casios have any "killer features" to recommend them over the Core that aren't obvious from the Casio website?

Any other models I should consider? Budget is £200ish so that rules out the Tissot T Touch and Suunto Elementum ranges even though they're cloud9.

andy_s

19,816 posts

283 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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I've used the Suunto xlander and vector well on the hills, the Core should be good now the initial probs have been sorted.

Fittster

20,120 posts

237 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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The compass on my Casio Sailing watch (can't recall the exact model) is more use as a random number generator than as a navigation tool.

troc

4,055 posts

199 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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Been using a Suunto Observer Ti as my trekking, climbing. skiing, outdoors-y watch for almost 10 years now with no complaints. Very light, enough functionality and easy to read.

Iceman82

1,311 posts

260 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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Are these resiliant enough though for the inevitable knocks you take cycling, rock climbing, hiking etc?

The Core is a great looking piece of kit but it looks as though a decent knock to it would smash the face or, at the very least, scratch it pretty badly. The Pro Trek looks like it could withstand more abuse but again, surely there answer is a G - Shock of some varient and then a separate, more reliable, compass?

Perhaps the G-Shock Riseman and a decent compass would be best? Or do people find that the compass on the Suunto/Pro Trek is good enough as it seems to be the main issue people have with these watches?

andy_s

19,816 posts

283 months

Monday 1st November 2010
quotequote all
If it's for taking/using bearings then a normal/prismatic is needed; for a rough (+/-5") direction of travel then the Suunto's are fine.

Tiggsy

10,261 posts

276 months

Monday 1st November 2010
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I looked at a Suunto but it just looked to much like a polar heart rate monitor!

Went for the new 2000 model protreck in the end:


neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

259 months

Tuesday 2nd November 2010
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NeMiSiS said:
You have to buy the 'Man on Fire' watch, and view the film if you haven't seen it.
Does it come with a free pair of secateurs and a car cigarette lighter? eek

Debaser

7,613 posts

285 months

Thursday 4th November 2010
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NeMiSiS said:
Altimeter mode.

Where were you?

ShadownINja

79,412 posts

306 months

Friday 5th November 2010
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Debaser said:
NeMiSiS said:
Altimeter mode.

Where were you?
That's a problem with pressure altimeters - as the weather changes, you get stupid readings. Apparently, I'm on Mount Kingston in SW London which is 500m above sea level.

Debaser

7,613 posts

285 months

Friday 5th November 2010
quotequote all
ShadownINja said:
Debaser said:
NeMiSiS said:
Altimeter mode.

Where were you?
That's a problem with pressure altimeters - as the weather changes, you get stupid readings. Apparently, I'm on Mount Kingston in SW London which is 500m above sea level.
Which makes them pretty useless without regular calibration.

ShadownINja

79,412 posts

306 months

Friday 5th November 2010
quotequote all
Debaser said:
ShadownINja said:
Debaser said:
NeMiSiS said:
Altimeter mode.

Where were you?
That's a problem with pressure altimeters - as the weather changes, you get stupid readings. Apparently, I'm on Mount Kingston in SW London which is 500m above sea level.
Which makes them pretty useless without regular calibration.
Egg-shack-lee.

Gooby

9,269 posts

258 months

Friday 5th November 2010
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Having played with and owned a few - the Suunto is in a league all by its own, by far the best, unfortunatly I purchased the Tissot Touch titanium, wanted it to look presentable when not on the side of a mountain. Love it a lot but unreliable as hell and back being fixed for the second time.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

259 months

Friday 5th November 2010
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies so far everyone.

Gooby said:
Having played with and owned a few - the Suunto is in a league all by its own, by far the best, unfortunatly I purchased the Tissot Touch titanium, wanted it to look presentable when not on the side of a mountain. Love it a lot but unreliable as hell and back being fixed for the second time.
So in what way would you say it's in a league of its own then?

ETA: I'm 99.9% sure I'll get the Core but just wondered what makes it stand out from the rest. Now to decide whether to stick to the black one above or stretch to the Aluminium / Black or the Everest Edition....

Edited by neilski on Friday 5th November 17:01

Zingari

945 posts

197 months

Friday 5th November 2010
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If you're a sniper this might be your bag! rofl

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&am...

Mind you it does offer some assistance from the bar to the bogs if you've had one too many laugh

WTF?

KP328

1,876 posts

219 months

Friday 5th November 2010
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If anyone is looking for a Pro Trek, Tiktox sell them.

I have bought three G-Shocks from there with no problems.

Gooby

9,269 posts

258 months

Thursday 18th November 2010
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neilski said:
Thanks for the replies so far everyone.

Gooby said:
Having played with and owned a few - the Suunto is in a league all by its own, by far the best, unfortunatly I purchased the Tissot Touch titanium, wanted it to look presentable when not on the side of a mountain. Love it a lot but unreliable as hell and back being fixed for the second time.
So in what way would you say it's in a league of its own then?

ETA: I'm 99.9% sure I'll get the Core but just wondered what makes it stand out from the rest. Now to decide whether to stick to the black one above or stretch to the Aluminium / Black or the Everest Edition....

Edited by neilski on Friday 5th November 17:01
Simply the fact that they work and are reliable. I have 3 suunto diving watchs / computers for many years (The joys of mixed gas diving) and they have been faultless and saved my life on a couple of occasions. Build quality is excelent, software is superb and they dont fail. My friend has a "core" and he has found the same thing.

The problem I have found with suunto is they are a weighty watch and if you select a rubber or leather strap, the mass of the watch in a fall can undo the strap - happened a couple of times, the metal straps are brilliant but a little weighty but very secure, the titanium bands are superb.

I should say that this is on a "stinger" which is a hefty dive computer to begin with. The sort of thing that can be used instead of a weight belt! Even so, many yeard of being bounced around dive boats amongst cylinders and dive belts, then thrown down to 65m in cold water have never phased the thing.

To my mind the casios are ugly and look infantile, they also feel cheap...
The Tissot is the looker with the titanium case and strap with the woven carbon fibre face etc, it is also light and comfortable but unreliable as hell and I am still waiting for it back from its second repair. It has very rarely been accurate or reliable, out of the 5 years I have owned it it has been good for about 3,, it would probably be less but sometimes the momentum to get it fixed is a little high...

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

259 months

Thursday 18th November 2010
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Thanks thumbup

Now to write to Santa....