In one of the more practical watch brand collaborations that we've
heard for a while, Casio has been working with Britain's Royal Air Force
on a new range designed for use in combat.
Formed in 1918, the RAF is one of the oldest air forces in the world. G-Shock approached them for input on the specifications for a watch that would actually be useful for a professional pilot.
The RAF asked its pilots (helicopter, jet, air transport) about what
they wanted in a watch, and after the (much shortened) final list had
been compiled, the RAF met with Casio's R&D team and came up with
the final specs. Some items that the pilots wanted, such as a torch, were excluded from the eventual design.
There was one overriding request from the RAF – that the watch be
discreet, with no metallic surfaces (including buckles) because of
reflection, and in a shade of grey that would be between the two types
of suits worn by their pilots.
The foundation of this G-Shock is the Casio 'Triple G Resist'
technology : shock-resistant, vibration-resistant, and resistant to
centrifugal gravity.
Added to this is something called 'Smart Access', described as an
analogue movement where each of the three hands are controlled by
individual motors, allowing the face of the watch to display different
types of information.
Functionally, 'Smart Access' will be able to do nifty things like allow
the watch to measure the temperature in the flight cabin, using the
hour, minute and second hands as indicators.
It will be a dual time zone watch, with one of these zones Greenwich Mean Time ('Zulu' time to aviator types). The Zulu time will be via a single-touch display. There will also be a stop watch for recording flight times and, as someone has already pointed out on a forum, a bomb-timer…
The case of the watch will include a shock-resistant electronic crown
and quick-lock rotary switch so they can't be activated by random
contact with hard surfaces. The hands on the watch are also longer than G-Shock's normal ones, at their request.
Accuracy-wise, it's all about atomic timekeeping from the signals of the six atomic clocks worldwide. If nothing else, this will chew up a lot of power; the RAF watch will be solar powered and have a rechargeable battery.
Obviously, being a watch designed for such use, it's considerably more
low key than many of Casio's G-Shock offerings, but for those who know
where to look, there will be one obvious identifying mark - a carbon
fibre resin keeper on the strap will be decorated with the RAF 'wings'
logo.
Rather dramatically called the “Gravity Defier” (Ref:
GW-A1000RAF-1AER), it is being released in a limited edition of 2000 and
will be on sale from June 2012 for GBP500. A rather expensive G-Shock, but I reckon it'll sell out.