Casio GPS watch
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trancemania
- Rank 3

- Posts: 105
- Joined: Fri Jun 08, 2007 11:56 am
Casio GPS watch
Hey,
I found out about this GPS watch that Casio use to make.
They haven’t made it for a couple of years now but you can still find them.
I just wondered if anyone knows about it and can maybe give some advice.
Its neat because it’s a GPS in a watch.
I don’t know how it is for actually using as a GPS,but it could be a neat thing to have
As a nice backup.
It also has a Altitude indicator,Barometer and Thermometer.
I found out about this GPS watch that Casio use to make.
They haven’t made it for a couple of years now but you can still find them.
I just wondered if anyone knows about it and can maybe give some advice.
Its neat because it’s a GPS in a watch.
I don’t know how it is for actually using as a GPS,but it could be a neat thing to have
As a nice backup.
It also has a Altitude indicator,Barometer and Thermometer.
- light chop
- Rank 3

- Posts: 125
- Joined: Tue Sep 25, 2007 7:51 pm
Suunto makes a wide array of quality wrist instruments - the X9i has GPS in it along with Baro/Altimeter, Temp, Compass, Time. The GPS works quite well, but is not as sensitive as a handheld GPS because there is no room for a good antenna in a wrist instrument. It won't pick up any satellites in a house/building, but outside it works fine. I was on a commercial flight a couple of days ago, I held the watch up to the window and was able to get 5 satellites. Got a speed reading of 477mph
@31,000 ft. kinda cool. The compass even worked in the tube once you calibrate it - I could follow the heading changes that were being radioed to our flight by ATC (United Airlines has cockpit comm on in-flight entertainment). The altimeter works very well, I use it as backup when flying - just set its reference to field elevation before you leave.
X9i costs about $529.00 CAD - not cheap.
Cripes I'm a friggin' geek.
http://www.suunto.com
@31,000 ft. kinda cool. The compass even worked in the tube once you calibrate it - I could follow the heading changes that were being radioed to our flight by ATC (United Airlines has cockpit comm on in-flight entertainment). The altimeter works very well, I use it as backup when flying - just set its reference to field elevation before you leave.
X9i costs about $529.00 CAD - not cheap.
Cripes I'm a friggin' geek.
http://www.suunto.com
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trancemania
- Rank 3

- Posts: 105
- Joined: Fri Jun 08, 2007 11:56 am
- light chop
- Rank 3

- Posts: 125
- Joined: Tue Sep 25, 2007 7:51 pm
It comes with a USB cable that allows the watch to connect to your PC and download log data (your lat/long/alt is logged every second or minute) to Google Earth, and there are various navigation modes (like mark home or a location and navigate back or you can enter lat/long position and navigate to the point via a bearing/distance). There is a software package that comes with the watch that I haven't even tried yet, so I'm not sure of all the different navigation functions it supports. There is no graphical mapping on the watch, however - your location is lat/long only. The battery recharges through the USB cable - it lasts for months unless you do a lot of GPS work - the GPS sucks a bit of juice. Apparently the US military in the middle east use this watch, Suunto came out with a model that has some added features for them - X9mi:
http://www.suuntowatches.com/Suunto-X9Mi.pro
Its a neat device, the diameter of the watch is about 2" (not small) but there is a lot of stuff packed in it.
http://www.suuntowatches.com/Suunto-X9Mi.pro
Its a neat device, the diameter of the watch is about 2" (not small) but there is a lot of stuff packed in it.
Definition of a junior co-pilot: Big clocks, small cocks and no money!Doc wrote:It'll look great on your little girl wrist! Along with your official Ray Ban sun glass case on your belt, your "Beaver" belt buckle, and your little gold bars! Yup! You'll look just like a real pilot!


