
casio g-shock watch AWGM100GW-7A
Product description
.auto-style1 { font-family: "Times New Roman"; font-size: 12pt; color: #000000; } Multi-Band Atomic Timekeeping (US, UK, Germany, Japan, China)Receives time calibration radio signals which keep the displayed time accurate Auto receive function (up to 6 times per day/up to 5 times per day for China) Manual receive function Signal: US WWVB, UK MSF, Germany DCF77, Japan JJY40/JJY60, China BPC Frequency: US 60kHz, UK 60kHz, Germany 77.5kHz, Japan 40/60kHz, BPC 68.5kHz Tough Solar Power Shock Resistant 200M Water Resistant Full Auto LED Light with Afterglow Neo-brite Luminous Hands and Markers World Time 31 times zones (48 cities + UTC), city code display, daylight saving on/off 5 Daily Alarms Hourly Time Signal 1/100 second stopwatch Measuring capacity: 59’59.99†Measuring modes: Elapsed time, split time Countdown Timer Measuring unit: 1 second Countdown range: 1 minute to 100 minutes Full Auto Calendar (pre-programmed until the year 2099) 12/24 Hour Formats Button operation tone on/off (tentative) Accuracy: +/-15 seconds per month (with no signal calibration) Storage Battery: Solar Rechargeable Battery Battery Power Indicator Power Saving Function Approx. battery life: 6 months on full charge (without further exposure to light) Module 5230
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With the launch of its first watch in November 1974, Casio entered the wristwatch market at a time when the watch industry had just discovered digital technology. As a company with cutting-edge electronic technology developed for pocket calculators, Casio entered this field confident that it could develop timepieces that would lead the market.
Today, Casio is focusing its efforts on solar-powered radio-controlled watches: the built-in solar battery eliminates the nuisance of replacing batteries, atomic timekeeping means the users never have to reset the time. Recently, Casio launched a series of Bluetooth watches that sync to the users cell phone to automatically update the time. Casio is always moving time forward