| | |  | Mechanical Hand Wind | Home » » » Casio Pathfinder Triple Sensor Mens Watch PAG40-3V | | | | | | | Description: | | Resin case and bracelet. Grey dial. Mineral crystal. Bearing Compass bezel. Quartz movement. 57mm Case Diameter. 17.9mm Case Thickness. Tang clasp. 100m Water Resistance. Day and Date Calendar. Casio Pathfinder Triple Sensor Men's Watches PAG40-3V | | | Product Details: | | | Product Length:
| 5.2 inches | | Product Width:
| 4.1 inches | | Product Height:
| 3.5 inches | | Product Weight:
| 0.4 pounds | | Package Length:
| 5.2 inches | | Package Width:
| 4.1 inches | | Package Height:
| 3.5 inches | | Package Weight:
| 0.55 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 88 reviews |
| | | Watch Information: | | | Crystal Material:
| Mineral | | Clasp:
| Buckle | | Case Diameter:
| 53 millimeters | | Case Thickness:
| 18 millimeters | | Case Material:
| Resin | | Band Material:
| Resin | | Bezel Material:
| Plastic | | Dial Color:
| grey | | Movement:
| Quartz | | Calendar:
| day-and-date | | Water Resistance Depth:
| 330 feet |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 88 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
129 of 133 found the following review helpful:
This is a great instrument for the right personsOct 19, 2007
By Joseph K. Williams I love this watch and never travel without it. I followed the instructions in the manual and use the thermometer a lot. To get an accurate ambient air temp reading I just take off the watch and wait about 8 minutes in the shade. You can also calibrate the thermometer and found the factory setting to be dead accurate! I discovered that if you read the temp while wearing this watch it will read your skin temp and have found this to be very helpful in monitoring my skin temp. Anything less than a 83 degrees means I am starting to get uncomfortably cold and need to warm up. 86 degrees skin temp is perfect for me. Knowing this allows me to tell if I have a fever or just over worked etc.
I use the altimeter alarm function when I fly to alert me of a faulty cabin pressure system during my commercial flights. I set my PAG 40 alarm to 8000 which is the maximum altitude pressure allowed in passenger cabins set by the FAA. If the cabin pressurization goes above 8000 ft the alarm will sound on the PAG 40. There is a graph at the top of the screen to check your altitude history. The graph is also used for tracking barometer history.
I calibrate my altimeter daily to get an accurate reading since the barameter will change by the hour.
The compass feature is great and you can also calibrate that too. I find the compass usefull at night and on heavy overcast days.
You get 5 seperate alarms and a short alarm for the top of each hour. All the alarms can be turned off or on seperately.
The stopwatch function does split times and single timing. It will not do laptimes for example timing laps at a race on after the other.
It runs on 4 batteries part# 395. Which I was able to change them myself.
Watch speed calibration was also accessible!
The display is large and easy to read.
I have owned my Casio PAG 40 for two years now.
The watch band has held just great so far and the watch is free of defects.
I plan to buy two more of these watches.
29 of 29 found the following review helpful:
great watchOct 28, 2009
By Bart A. Barnack
"Daytona"
My first one last through 3 assignments in Iraq and one in Afghanistan. Half the team wore this watch and the other half the Suunto Vector. Must of us owned both. I found the Casio Pathfinder easier to use.
The only issue I had with my watch is sometimes it went into conflict and went through all the modes and would not stop until the batteries were removed. I was the only one that had this issue.
We worked in extreme enviroments and the watch took a beating. Sand Storms, attacks of all types, crashes, high heat 125 - 130 degrees. Cold below zero for long periods. All the features were a great asset to all of us. We often compared data with our other instruments like GPS and other sensors we had. The watch was close.
The large dial is a plus in the field. I would still have the first one but when I took it to a watch shop for new batteries, it was not sealed properly and on a swim exercise it leaked.
20 of 20 found the following review helpful:
Casio PAG40Jun 14, 2008
By M. Gaston "watch guy" The PAG 40 is an older model in the Casio Pathfinder series. It does not have some of the features of the newer models. However, it does have one of the best displays of the entire series. It also has a "rugged" look to the watch which I and many find appealing. It isn't an atomic model, but it keeps very good time. The "abc" features of the watch are not always precisely accurate, but close enough for the average person's needs. I tend to use the barometer and I like the 24 hr graph to show the barometic tendency. I have several different Pathfinder models and this older model remains one of my favorites. The only "negative" would be that a battery change involves getting 4 new batteries.
16 of 17 found the following review helpful:
Great Solid performance from casioOct 20, 2006
By Mark Have had this Pathfinder for about a year. It keeps great time and is very solid and waterproof. The altitude is very accurate when compared to my GPS altimiter. Temperature is very accurate also. Backlight is very nice too.
19 of 21 found the following review helpful:
Great Watch!Jan 16, 2007
By A. Dauby I bought this watch as a gift for my husband. He absolutely LOVES it! He used it all through Army Ranger school and all his classmates wanted one too. He likes all the features, the stopwatch, barometer, altimeter, etc. It has held up for over two years during some really rigorous outdoor training and is still running great and looks great. I would recommend it for anyone, especially someone who likes to use all the bells and whistles it comes with.
See all 88 customer reviews on Amazon.com
| | |
|