Anything is a gimmick for someone who won't need to use it, and indispensable for someone who will. Will I need a compass bezel? Probably not. Will someone? Undoubtedly.
The casual cut to a previously filmed segment in another country is CLASS. And the shorter form content I think is a great way for you to lighten the load on yourself...film a few different things over a few days, release em slow and get some breaks and rest through the year. Loving what you're doing!
Nice video. I used this feature while hiking with a Seiko Alpinist twenty years ago. Not for survival, but just for fun using a map. The watch and the memory of how to use the bezel are long gone. Fun to watch and re-learn.
I've seen this talked about in videos, but the actual demonstration outside and the comparing to the compass in your phone was nice to see. I enjoyed this brief video.
Thank you for this video. I believe the compass bezel is useful and I appreciate you demonstrating how to use it. Next time please give a few more examples, maybe with morning sun vs evening sun as I don’t understand how that would still work.
This is definitely a good topic for a broader conversation. Compass bezels, excessive water resistance, bronze cases/bracelets, faux patina, exhibition case backs displaying undecorated movements, all of these things are gimmicks to a degree. Some are good, some not so much. BUT with that being said, I do love the unique look a compass bezel gives off!
@@761jared Water resistance is rated for X time at Y depth. So a watch rated for a greater depth than you actually are will actually help you have peace of mind that it will remain waterproof at the depth you are but for a much longer time. Which is actually a sensible, useful, not gimmicky, feature to have.
If you don't wear a watch and rely on your smartphone, then anything on a mechanical watch is a gimmick. :) I don't think it is a gimmick though. I use my dive watch every day as a tool for timing, and I love relying on it instead of technology. What's great about the Hamilton is that it's bringing attention to using any watch as a compass, and you know what? I have now been doing that with my dive watch as well! :) Thanks for everything you do, Adrian. I love your videos. Keep them coming!
For those uncertain why this works, here is the explanation for when you are north of the Tropic of Cancer: If the Earth were transparent you could observe the Sun move in a circle completely around you in 24 hours. If we used a watch with a 24 hour face, we could aim the hour hand at the sun, hold that position, and observe the hour hand track the sun perfectly for a full 24 hours (or as long as we wished to observe). We wouldn't have any need for the bezel. Just aim the hour hand at the sun any time of day and the noon position on the dial will be pointing south and the midnight position will point north. Unfortunately, we chose to use 12 hour watch faces so our hour hands make two circles for every one the sun makes. That is where the bezel becomes useful. It simulates a 24 hour hand. So, if the standard time is 4:00pm, you set the bezel south point to 2:00pm. That point is where a 24 hour hand would be at 4 o'clock. You could then rotate the watch so the bezel south points at the sun and that would make the 12:00 point face due south just as a 24 hour watch would do, but since the angle on your watch face from noon to 2:00 is the same as the angle from 2:00 to 4:00 you can just keep the real hour hand pointing at the sun and the bezel south will be pointing at due south. For morning hours, it is the same except the bezel south will be set to the left of noon: if the time is 9:00am, set bezel south to 10:30. At 5:00am (7 hours before noon), set bezel south to 8:30 (3 1/2 hours before noon). At 6:30pm (6 1/2 hours after noon) set bezel south to 3:15 (3 1/4 hours after noon).
Finally someone who can actually explain this feature, literally couldn't get my head round it - Merci!You deserve more credit than any of these videos. Scott's the man
I like the three minute Friday segment -compass bezels (for me) are gimmicky, but dive bezels are very useful. My dive watch (a Marathon GSAR) never sees the ocean, but…the bezel is useful in timing daily tasks, hiking (in Alaska, the sun isn’t a good indicator of time passed), and letting the kid see how much time they have left to play before nap time. Also, I like the channel’s new direction.
On both Arctic and desert survival courses I was taught how to use my CWC G10 for this. It also works (to an extent) in jungle. Also very useful in unfamiliar cities (urban jungle or wasteland?) when using a tourist map. A GMT or dive bezel can be used to help if you don’t have a compass bezel. The G10 had neither, but is incredibly accurate.
A bush pilot in Alaska (or similar area), a hiker, ATV rider, off road driver, in some parts of the US or Australia might very well have a use for one of these. This technique is still taught as a survival technique even though less people are wearing watches because they think they can just use their phone for everything.
Super to see the content flow, lovely format, like a bite size treat. As for the compass, it's a great party trick stood in a beer garden. (or with your kids) That alone makes it useful. I remember when first iPhones came out and you could get oohs and ahhhs from showing a compass on that! I don't dive in my watches beyond the pool, or use my Gmt even when I could. They add something of interest, and often some style/ design as they solve how to integrate them.
I went to a music fest in an unfamiliar city, my phone at the time was grossly out of date and the map program wouldn't work properly. But the festival had physical maps of the city with all the venues and streets clearly marked, so I went to a store, paid 10 bucks for a compass and got around that way. So I don't think its to terribly gimmicky. I found it was pretty nice using a map and compass to navigate and on several occasions over the weekend of the festival I oriented and got around better than my friends who were using phone gps.
You can do the same with a regular watch, just visualize a few points and lines and you can do it consistently and fast. It even works on a digital watch if you mark the bezel or are very good at visualizing.
You don't need a watch at all if you know the time. How do you know the time without a watch? A phone or you know what time sunrise and sunset is at. Of course SR in the East, SS in the west.
@@michaelblaes9847 "you don't need a watch at all if you know the time" bro what? You don't need a ruler if you know the length of an object you're trying to measure
I have used a dive bezel a lot. I’ve also used the watch/compass trick but never needed a bezel to do it; in fact this would just add more time and reduce utility. The dive bezel serves a purpose, beyond jut diving, of setting a starting point in time that can be easily referenced and which doesn’t change; your relative position to N/S can change regularly.
It is quite a useful feature, if someone wants to map new roads or city in their own mind. When Travelling in a new city. It provides sense of direction via sun, & renewed presence of mind.
I used to love about effing time but there was one issue, we never really got your content as much, loving the fact you’re giving us more content, keep it going mate
The most legitimately useful feature I had on a watch is the calendar dials on an orient watch. For some reason I frequently get told the dates for when things would occur but need to check what day of the week that is. It was just a simple lookup table, look for date, look up to find day. Game changing. It also had a slide rule which was absolutely useless for me but it was a cool feature to have.
I like the watch but hope for a version with a "time count bezel" and other hands. So much about compass bezel and faux patina hands. Cheers from Switzerland, hope you enjoyed it here.
A dive bezel is actually quite handy for timing anything even if it’s just boiling an egg! It’s easy to time from the hour indices on any watch but not necessarily from between them. That’s when the dive bezel is really handy.
I use the dive bezel all the time for rough timing of anything under an hour. Parking meters and restaurant wait times and such. The compass thing is neat, I like knowing my cardinals and it's easy enough to use the dive bezel for that. Arrow is N, 30 is S, and so on. Just don't forget to correct for daylight savings.
I've got this weird mental block where I always get East and West confused. Every time it comes up I have to point up, right, down, left and say 'north, east, south, west' to remind myself. And it comes up a lot because I'm involved in construction. So really I could probably do with this.
Once, I was crossing the southern alps, and I had my compass freeze solid in my aircraft. The machine wasn't GPS equipped. By happenstance, I had a pocket compass on me. However, I taught my student how to find a heading using his wristwatch. This can be done with any watch. No bezel required. However, it's the other way around in my part of the world...
I HAVE USED IT! It was pretty convinent to me on mountain trail. However it doesn't work on the northern slopes :( But to be honest I didn't knew how to use a bezel (despite having one) but I knew exactly how to use arrow trick! So my adventures are proof that it's a gimmick...
Enjoyed that, hopefully see more of this style videos. I love Hamilton but a lot of their watches and the ones I own are 50m water resistant and I’m not actually sure if they’re up to the test of being submerged, would be a good video to learn the actual applications of depth rating (diver watches aside)👍
Love the format. As a military man I have used both the dive bezel and a watch as a compass ( to find my ship in the North Atlantic) but to be honest, to the man in the street, a mechanical watch these days is a gimmick.😎
For everyone on Earth except for a tiny handful of people, stuff like the diving bezel or a compass bezel is a little more than a fidget toy built into your watch, which I like. Sometimes I like to mess with stuff like that, and if it doesn't have that there's not much to fidget with on a watch.
Isn't a watch that only indicates the time also a gimmick? Thank you sir for your explanation on how to use this great feature that not only makes a watch more useful, but ads to its aesthetics. Cheers.
I dream about this watch 🤩 But I also wish the white dial would come on a bracelet 🥲I love your videos and aesthetics btw! I don't know a thing about watches (I own 3 mechanical watches and nothing too fancy) but this one resembles everything I'd actually look for in an everyday watch :)
I actually do use the compass bezel pretty often. I do a lot of hiking and try to minimise gear and weight as much as possible, a watch with a compass bezel means i no longer have to carry a compass and wear a watch.
Stunning watch! Cool bezel (is it a complication? Not really)! I only knew this, using a dive bezel or GMT bezel, using the triangle up top to point out South in the Northern hemisphere; I didn’t know there was a compass bezel.
@@marceld6061 I thought the "pip" was the lumed (often round shape) insert inside the triangle on a dive bezel. The GMT, more often than not, doesn't have a "pip", only a triangle.
@@MaartenAnna You may be right. I have only known it to be called a pip- all but one of my watches have them, dive or otherwise. The one that doesn't has no lumed markings.
It serves a purpose therefore in my opinion it's not a gimmick. There are definitely situations where it is warranted albeit very few. Explorers will typically have their own compass, but say that breaks then they can rely on the compass bezel of their watch providing their watch is functioning also. Maybe it's not an extremely useful feature given that we have a multitude of ways to navigate now, but I still think it has its uses.
If a gimmick is a feature you don't need, it's all a gimmick. Accuracy, day, date, lume, PR, WR, calendar -- is all just a way to sell watches. Do I value it? No. But if you do, great.😂
As far as I can tell, the only extra feature I like on a watch other than being able to read the time CLEARLY (skeleton watches and messy faces are not for me) is a day date. Many times I forget the date and a quick glance at my wrist is useful - faster than taking my phone out of my pocket. And yes, there have been occasions I've forgotten what the day is. A stopwatch feature is kind of nice, but really I'll use my phone for that, with lap times. I don't travel much, so time zones aren't something I care about. Is there a useful feature you think I might be missing out on? What extra feature do you like having? I just realized one extra feature that I think I'd like to have that I don't have. A power reserve. I think that would be nice. My preference leans towards classic dials I suppose. Care to recommend a watch under £1000 and another below £6000 ?
I probably use my divers bezel, to track time up to an hour, almost every day. Boss tells you 20min break? set your bezel. Meet me back here in 10 minutes? set your bezel. 45 minute workout? set your bezel. way more uses than just time under water
I use the dive/compass bezels on my watches to time myself during my clinic when seeing patients. I can give a quick glance at my watch to see how I'm doing time wise without appearing rude or dismissive of the fact I have another human being sat in front of me, compared to how it would look checking the time on a computer or phone.
You don't have to be lost in the middle of nowhere to have a use for a compass bezel. I use a compass in a watch to orient myself in any new city i visit. Knowing the sides of the world relative to some most visible landmarks lets me create a reference map in my mind, a sort of imagined from-the-top view of the area. Thanks to that I'm never lost in new places and don't have to constantly check my position on google maps.
I learned how to use it. I didn't learn why it works (that's okay though, considering time constraints). But crucially, I'm concerned with the precision of your chronograph.
You forgot to mention that your demo was in the north of the equator and in the northern hemisphere, would the same setting work south of the equator?.
It's been said here before, it is a gimmick to some and a tool for others. Agreed, most people won't be stranded and need to use it, but honestly, it wouldn't hurt a lot of people to learn HOW to use a compass. Like you said, It does look good on the watch and it does serve a function. I think most watch enthusiasts like a watch that is multifunctional.
I like the compass bezel. I think it can be useful. If others don’t, they are free to buy another type of watch. Certainly more useful than a moon phase!
Not a gimmick for me. I like having backup methods to navigate when I frequent the backcountry, and this is handy. But I am a person trying to move to more analog devices and fewer digital interfaces. To me, the compass bezel is a nice feature on a nice watch that in no way detracts from the watch aesthetics.
Is love it od hamilton released a version I'd this with a dive bezel, calk it a skin diver due to its 100m water resistance, same case and everything else though
I'm no expert but I feel like with the trip to Switzerland this actually took you a lot longer than 3 minutes to explain.
I really like the 3 minute Friday feature. Please keep it going. Thanks Adrian. Enjoy the weekend.
That's what my gf calls our Friday date nights.
Anything is a gimmick for someone who won't need to use it, and indispensable for someone who will. Will I need a compass bezel? Probably not. Will someone? Undoubtedly.
Will it blow my kids mind? Hopefully! This is going my wish list 😄
Nuff said. Great comment. So silly those ranting about why a diver bracelet has a diver extension. "Wah wah you'll never use it geez" etc
Best comment
Or just use your phone!!!
@@AntCar-z4sa phone runs out of power after awhile and you need to put it into a bag if you'e going through enough water
The casual cut to a previously filmed segment in another country is CLASS.
And the shorter form content I think is a great way for you to lighten the load on yourself...film a few different things over a few days, release em slow and get some breaks and rest through the year.
Loving what you're doing!
Nice video. I used this feature while hiking with a Seiko Alpinist twenty years ago. Not for survival, but just for fun using a map. The watch and the memory of how to use the bezel are long gone. Fun to watch and re-learn.
I've seen this talked about in videos, but the actual demonstration outside and the comparing to the compass in your phone was nice to see. I enjoyed this brief video.
Your phrase about a feature on a watch makes it easier or quicker to tell that information is spot on. Loved your videos with Harrison to Banff!
Thank you for this video. I believe the compass bezel is useful and I appreciate you demonstrating how to use it. Next time please give a few more examples, maybe with morning sun vs evening sun as I don’t understand how that would still work.
This is definitely a good topic for a broader conversation. Compass bezels, excessive water resistance, bronze cases/bracelets, faux patina, exhibition case backs displaying undecorated movements, all of these things are gimmicks to a degree. Some are good, some not so much. BUT with that being said, I do love the unique look a compass bezel gives off!
C'mon, when is having 300m of water resistance NOT going to be useful? lol
@@761jared when you need 1500m! Hahahaha
@@761jared Water resistance is rated for X time at Y depth. So a watch rated for a greater depth than you actually are will actually help you have peace of mind that it will remain waterproof at the depth you are but for a much longer time. Which is actually a sensible, useful, not gimmicky, feature to have.
If you don't wear a watch and rely on your smartphone, then anything on a mechanical watch is a gimmick. :) I don't think it is a gimmick though. I use my dive watch every day as a tool for timing, and I love relying on it instead of technology. What's great about the Hamilton is that it's bringing attention to using any watch as a compass, and you know what? I have now been doing that with my dive watch as well! :) Thanks for everything you do, Adrian. I love your videos. Keep them coming!
"Instead of technology"? Do you think watches aren't, or maybe cavemen just found them laying around or growing in the mysterious Watch Tree?
@@761jared he obviously meant tech-gadgets, but go on be more pedantic
@@761jared perhaps he should've said instead of techbro-logy
Nice! Love the use of the stop watch for the @abouteffingtime nod!
Haha. Love that connection. That wasn’t intentional.
For those uncertain why this works, here is the explanation for when you are north of the Tropic of Cancer: If the Earth were transparent you could observe the Sun move in a circle completely around you in 24 hours. If we used a watch with a 24 hour face, we could aim the hour hand at the sun, hold that position, and observe the hour hand track the sun perfectly for a full 24 hours (or as long as we wished to observe). We wouldn't have any need for the bezel. Just aim the hour hand at the sun any time of day and the noon position on the dial will be pointing south and the midnight position will point north. Unfortunately, we chose to use 12 hour watch faces so our hour hands make two circles for every one the sun makes. That is where the bezel becomes useful. It simulates a 24 hour hand. So, if the standard time is 4:00pm, you set the bezel south point to 2:00pm. That point is where a 24 hour hand would be at 4 o'clock. You could then rotate the watch so the bezel south points at the sun and that would make the 12:00 point face due south just as a 24 hour watch would do, but since the angle on your watch face from noon to 2:00 is the same as the angle from 2:00 to 4:00 you can just keep the real hour hand pointing at the sun and the bezel south will be pointing at due south. For morning hours, it is the same except the bezel south will be set to the left of noon: if the time is 9:00am, set bezel south to 10:30. At 5:00am (7 hours before noon), set bezel south to 8:30 (3 1/2 hours before noon). At 6:30pm (6 1/2 hours after noon) set bezel south to 3:15 (3 1/4 hours after noon).
Finally someone who can actually explain this feature, literally couldn't get my head round it - Merci!You deserve more credit than any of these videos. Scott's the man
Thats a cool watch, I had no clue how it worked either. Nice to have you back.
Easy to see the PM inspiration in this video, and executed nicely. Thanks for the quick guide 👍
Love this new format of video. Glad to see that the frequency is back!
Ahhh, I’m glad your back doing your content on the regular!!! Thankyou for what you do!!
I like the three minute Friday segment -compass bezels (for me) are gimmicky, but dive bezels are very useful. My dive watch (a Marathon GSAR) never sees the ocean, but…the bezel is useful in timing daily tasks, hiking (in Alaska, the sun isn’t a good indicator of time passed), and letting the kid see how much time they have left to play before nap time.
Also, I like the channel’s new direction.
As a Muslim it’s really useful when you’re out and about as we have to pray in a certain direction and this can help confirm directions.
I didn't know that muslims prayed into different directions, interesting.
@@snubRadar01 they pray towards Mecca so a compass can be handy finding which way that is
God hears our prayers regardless of direction, but it’s still a cool watch!
@stinkstank5177 obviously, but you still have to.
@@stinkstank5177different god
On both Arctic and desert survival courses I was taught how to use my CWC G10 for this. It also works (to an extent) in jungle. Also very useful in unfamiliar cities (urban jungle or wasteland?) when using a tourist map. A GMT or dive bezel can be used to help if you don’t have a compass bezel. The G10 had neither, but is incredibly accurate.
Just found you, you have my sub. Really love the short videos - straight to the point and no filler. Will be watching more.
A bush pilot in Alaska (or similar area), a hiker, ATV rider, off road driver, in some parts of the US or Australia might very well have a use for one of these. This technique is still taught as a survival technique even though less people are wearing watches because they think they can just use their phone for everything.
My experience with NKUWAN was fantastic. The watch arrived quickly and was exactly as described.
Every day is a school day, thank you, great to bump into you at Luton airport last week
Super to see the content flow, lovely format, like a bite size treat. As for the compass, it's a great party trick stood in a beer garden. (or with your kids) That alone makes it useful. I remember when first iPhones came out and you could get oohs and ahhhs from showing a compass on that! I don't dive in my watches beyond the pool, or use my Gmt even when I could. They add something of interest, and often some style/ design as they solve how to integrate them.
I love anything with a clicky bezel😂
Jup 😎😁
yeah it can be purposed as fidget toy
Congrats on the concept of these videos… Great stuff
Seiko Alpinist owner here. One nice thing about a compass bezel is that you can use it as an ersatz timing bezel if needed.
I went to a music fest in an unfamiliar city, my phone at the time was grossly out of date and the map program wouldn't work properly. But the festival had physical maps of the city with all the venues and streets clearly marked, so I went to a store, paid 10 bucks for a compass and got around that way. So I don't think its to terribly gimmicky. I found it was pretty nice using a map and compass to navigate and on several occasions over the weekend of the festival I oriented and got around better than my friends who were using phone gps.
You can do the same with a regular watch, just visualize a few points and lines and you can do it consistently and fast. It even works on a digital watch if you mark the bezel or are very good at visualizing.
You don't need a watch at all if you know the time. How do you know the time without a watch? A phone or you know what time sunrise and sunset is at. Of course SR in the East, SS in the west.
@@michaelblaes9847 "you don't need a watch at all if you know the time" bro what? You don't need a ruler if you know the length of an object you're trying to measure
@@michaelblaes9847LOL tell me you've never been in a survival situation without out telling me you've never been in a survival situation.
Great video! I am glad to see you back!
Very handy when walking in a new city to keep you oriented; particularly when trying to follow directions “need to go north on 5th street”
I really like this video idea and format. This is great.
I have used a dive bezel a lot. I’ve also used the watch/compass trick but never needed a bezel to do it; in fact this would just add more time and reduce utility. The dive bezel serves a purpose, beyond jut diving, of setting a starting point in time that can be easily referenced and which doesn’t change; your relative position to N/S can change regularly.
It is quite a useful feature, if someone wants to map new roads or city in their own mind.
When Travelling in a new city.
It provides sense of direction via sun, & renewed presence of mind.
I used to love about effing time but there was one issue, we never really got your content as much, loving the fact you’re giving us more content, keep it going mate
It's useful if you use it. I work outdoors in central and western Texas and it is handy to have a quick compass.
Reminds me Breitling's Navitimer slide rule.
Totally useless nowadays but it gives a real cool look to the watch.
Cheers Adrian, great peice for learning and admiring the watch, keep up the great work mate
Your new staging is brilliant 🤙🏻
You don't need to be stuck most of use that like hiking perfer map and compass to GPS having a quick check is useful
The most legitimately useful feature I had on a watch is the calendar dials on an orient watch. For some reason I frequently get told the dates for when things would occur but need to check what day of the week that is. It was just a simple lookup table, look for date, look up to find day. Game changing.
It also had a slide rule which was absolutely useless for me but it was a cool feature to have.
There are also super cute mini compasses to put on the strap.
I might get one some day (don't need it, just cute)
I like the watch but hope for a version with a "time count bezel" and other hands. So much about compass bezel and faux patina hands. Cheers from Switzerland, hope you enjoyed it here.
It’s a useful gimmick. It’s possible and probable that you might never need it. But if you ever do need it, you’ll be glad you had it.
A dive bezel is actually quite handy for timing anything even if it’s just boiling an egg! It’s easy to time from the hour indices on any watch but not necessarily from between them. That’s when the dive bezel is really handy.
Love this style os videos. Short and precise... I bet it took more than 3 minutes editing it 😉
I use the dive bezel all the time for rough timing of anything under an hour. Parking meters and restaurant wait times and such.
The compass thing is neat, I like knowing my cardinals and it's easy enough to use the dive bezel for that. Arrow is N, 30 is S, and so on. Just don't forget to correct for daylight savings.
I've got this weird mental block where I always get East and West confused. Every time it comes up I have to point up, right, down, left and say 'north, east, south, west' to remind myself. And it comes up a lot because I'm involved in construction. So really I could probably do with this.
Thanks for answering my question Adrian :) The offer's still there to go flying and talk pilot watches sometime.
Nice feature, Adrian. Hope it takes off.
Thanks mate. 👍🏻
Once, I was crossing the southern alps, and I had my compass freeze solid in my aircraft. The machine wasn't GPS equipped. By happenstance, I had a pocket compass on me. However, I taught my student how to find a heading using his wristwatch. This can be done with any watch. No bezel required. However, it's the other way around in my part of the world...
Thanks mate. Never had a compass bezel but its now locked in the suede incase i do!
If the hour hand is at 10 o'clock, you should place South at 11, or at 5?
I like the stopwatch, where's it from? I want to get something similar
Its a small but a feature that could prove really important. Better to have something and not need it than need something and not need it.
I HAVE USED IT!
It was pretty convinent to me on mountain trail. However it doesn't work on the northern slopes :(
But to be honest I didn't knew how to use a bezel (despite having one) but I knew exactly how to use arrow trick!
So my adventures are proof that it's a gimmick...
What is the camera used in the alps? That video clip looks amazing.
Excellent analysis, thanks!
Enjoyed that, hopefully see more of this style videos. I love Hamilton but a lot of their watches and the ones I own are 50m water resistant and I’m not actually sure if they’re up to the test of being submerged, would be a good video to learn the actual applications of depth rating (diver watches aside)👍
Love the format. As a military man I have used both the dive bezel and a watch as a compass ( to find my ship in the North Atlantic) but to be honest, to the man in the street, a mechanical watch these days is a gimmick.😎
For everyone on Earth except for a tiny handful of people, stuff like the diving bezel or a compass bezel is a little more than a fidget toy built into your watch, which I like. Sometimes I like to mess with stuff like that, and if it doesn't have that there's not much to fidget with on a watch.
Adrian. Great to have you back in real watch nerdery
Isn't a watch that only indicates the time also a gimmick?
Thank you sir for your explanation on how to use this great feature that not only makes a watch more useful, but ads to its aesthetics.
Cheers.
No. A wrist mounted chronometer is a useful tool. It's a type of tool that is designed to measure the passage of time.
A useful tool is not a gimmick.
A GMT watch also does this sorcery by pointing the hour hand towards the sun
How do you turn the bezel if you are about the equator?
I have a question, do we always rotate the bezel counterclockwise ? Thank you.
I dream about this watch 🤩 But I also wish the white dial would come on a bracelet 🥲I love your videos and aesthetics btw! I don't know a thing about watches (I own 3 mechanical watches and nothing too fancy) but this one resembles everything I'd actually look for in an everyday watch :)
I actually do use the compass bezel pretty often. I do a lot of hiking and try to minimise gear and weight as much as possible, a watch with a compass bezel means i no longer have to carry a compass and wear a watch.
Stunning watch! Cool bezel (is it a complication? Not really)!
I only knew this, using a dive bezel or GMT bezel, using the triangle up top to point out South in the Northern hemisphere; I didn’t know there was a compass bezel.
That triangle up top is called the 'pip' in case you wanted to know.
@@marceld6061 I thought the "pip" was the lumed (often round shape) insert inside the triangle on a dive bezel. The GMT, more often than not, doesn't have a "pip", only a triangle.
@@MaartenAnna You may be right. I have only known it to be called a pip- all but one of my watches have them, dive or otherwise. The one that doesn't has no lumed markings.
It serves a purpose therefore in my opinion it's not a gimmick. There are definitely situations where it is warranted albeit very few. Explorers will typically have their own compass, but say that breaks then they can rely on the compass bezel of their watch providing their watch is functioning also. Maybe it's not an extremely useful feature given that we have a multitude of ways to navigate now, but I still think it has its uses.
That cut to Switzerland, effort... subscribed.
Thanks a lot mate 🙌🏻
In the Southern hemisphere, the 24 hour hand of a GMT watch always points to the South when the 12 hour index is pointed towards the sun.
It’s fun and it looks cool. Sounds very necessary to me! 😎😅
Apsolute! 😎😁
If a gimmick is a feature you don't need, it's all a gimmick. Accuracy, day, date, lume, PR, WR, calendar -- is all just a way to sell watches. Do I value it? No. But if you do, great.😂
“Looks cool and serves a purpose” is why we love watches.
Cool! Just ordered SLA071, so want to know this! Does Daylight Savings Time screw it up a bit?
As far as I can tell, the only extra feature I like on a watch other than being able to read the time CLEARLY (skeleton watches and messy faces are not for me) is a day date. Many times I forget the date and a quick glance at my wrist is useful - faster than taking my phone out of my pocket. And yes, there have been occasions I've forgotten what the day is. A stopwatch feature is kind of nice, but really I'll use my phone for that, with lap times. I don't travel much, so time zones aren't something I care about. Is there a useful feature you think I might be missing out on? What extra feature do you like having?
I just realized one extra feature that I think I'd like to have that I don't have. A power reserve. I think that would be nice.
My preference leans towards classic dials I suppose. Care to recommend a watch under £1000 and another below £6000 ?
Omega, Tudor, Seiko
I probably use my divers bezel, to track time up to an hour, almost every day. Boss tells you 20min break? set your bezel. Meet me back here in 10 minutes? set your bezel. 45 minute workout? set your bezel.
way more uses than just time under water
Does a bezel really count as a complication though?
I use the dive/compass bezels on my watches to time myself during my clinic when seeing patients. I can give a quick glance at my watch to see how I'm doing time wise without appearing rude or dismissive of the fact I have another human being sat in front of me, compared to how it would look checking the time on a computer or phone.
Silly question: What if it's not a compass bezel? Can you still us it to find directions?
You don't have to be lost in the middle of nowhere to have a use for a compass bezel. I use a compass in a watch to orient myself in any new city i visit. Knowing the sides of the world relative to some most visible landmarks lets me create a reference map in my mind, a sort of imagined from-the-top view of the area. Thanks to that I'm never lost in new places and don't have to constantly check my position on google maps.
I learned how to use it. I didn't learn why it works (that's okay though, considering time constraints). But crucially, I'm concerned with the precision of your chronograph.
Question… if you live in the tropics let’s say 15N what happens when the sun comes over you and goes few degrees to the north?
Are you shooting the snow footage on the DJI Pocket 3?
You forgot to mention that your demo was in the north of the equator and in the northern hemisphere, would the same setting work south of the equator?.
remote place? I once used this method in the middle of Rome to help me find my way back to my hotel!
The Boy Scout handbook used a variation of that trick, no compass bezel required, over 50 years ago.
It's been said here before, it is a gimmick to some and a tool for others. Agreed, most people won't be stranded and need to use it, but honestly, it wouldn't hurt a lot of people to learn HOW to use a compass. Like you said, It does look good on the watch and it does serve a function. I think most watch enthusiasts like a watch that is multifunctional.
“And we have a a sun” 😂
I use my diving bezel all the time. Putting beer iun the freezer, tiuming a bbq etc. fun stuff
Does the compass bezel save time over a dive or gmt bezel for the same function? If not, then it’s a gimmick.
Good explanation, but only good for PM, AM is different!
I like the compass bezel. I think it can be useful. If others don’t, they are free to buy another type of watch. Certainly more useful than a moon phase!
Not a gimmick for me. I like having backup methods to navigate when I frequent the backcountry, and this is handy. But I am a person trying to move to more analog devices and fewer digital interfaces. To me, the compass bezel is a nice feature on a nice watch that in no way detracts from the watch aesthetics.
Hey man you made good sense of it . Thank you
glad you`re back
Finally... This guy explained what that dial is for which I used to mimic the Omnitrix when i was a kid 😂.
A can turn a Sunday into an city exploration only to use the compass of my watch. Very useful
Got taught this in Scouts as a child, hasn’t come in handy yet but you never know…
Give it a few more years!
Is love it od hamilton released a version I'd this with a dive bezel, calk it a skin diver due to its 100m water resistance, same case and everything else though