Thank you for this useful and beneficial video regarding tachymeter. There is only one thing; To complete 1 mile distance in 28 seconds, our speed will be 128 miles/hour not 128km/hr.
Tachymeter can also be used as a pulsometer with some conversion. Once you feel a pulse, you start the chronograph function. Count for 30 pulses (the starting one count as zero). Then stop the chronograph. By dividing the tachymeter reading by 2, the result is pulses per minute.
you just need a second hand...count the pulse for 6 seconds and multiply by 10; that is it. did that for several years in med school...unless you are instructed to take the full minute on certain medical conditions.
Tachymeters went the way of the divewatch: many people own them, professionals stopped using them decades ago, and not that many people actually still know what they really used to be for.
@@robinrobson5363 Pilot here... and AOPA member. No matter how well we my like the style, none of us actually use any pilot watch functions for anything other than basic time telling in the cockpit. GMT is about the only useful thing for pilots, assuming you're traveling international a lot. I actually use a chono and diver's bezel a lot, but mostly in the gym timing sets, or the kitchen when I've got multiple things going on the stove.
over the last 50 years...& with all the chronos i've owned...i thought it was some gadget for divers that just looked cool. so i learned something new today. 🙏🏽
That you, 72 just achieved my pilots licence and now armed with this my cross country navigation will be a breeze. Thank for such an easy to understand instruction.
Get a Breitling! If one desires to own a chronograph one should own a chronograph by a company devoted to chronograph movements years ahead of other watch companies. Breitling, instruments for professionals.
🇨🇦 Mine is a 1972 Seiko Automatic Chronograph with a 'Pepsi' fixed bezel outside and an adjustable internal bezel ! Works perfectly, still stylish, self-winding and still totally accurate ! 🇨🇦
Also works on distances longer than 1. Multiply the timed result by the track distance. Example: Daytona International Speedway's oval course is 2.5 miles. If a car completes one lap in 45 seconds, the result would be 80. 80 x 2.5 = 200mph average speed.
@@romrig4648 I was simply pointing out courses over one mile, kilometer, or whatever metric you are using. Plus, the tachymeter shortens the equation from distance/time X 3600 in those longer than one situations.
PETER, YOU ARE MAGNIFICENT!! AFTER ALL THESE YEARS OF PROFILING EXPENSIVE WATCHES, NOW I KNOW HOW TO ACTUALLY USE THE TACH FEATURES AND THE CHRONOGRAPH, EXPLAINED IN SIMPE EASY TO UNDERSTAND MANNER. SUPERB VIDEO. FIVE STARS!!!
Great stuff, we almost never used the tachymeter for anything but its looks so understanding its tool usage is nice. Like a slide rule, the more you use it the more it will become familiar.
Very imformative. I thought I knew what I needed to know about the tachymeter before I watched the vid. I'm going to have to watch this again a couple of times to feel fully educated.
Dude, all these years I've had fancy watches & cars and didn't think about the topics that you have explained in the video. Thank you for adding to my knowledge.
Great explanation... I just purchased a Chronograph watch because I loved the way it looks. I am thrilled to know I can actually use it to time my efficiency at things like preparing burgers or determining the average speed of a car in case my speedometer breaks. 🤣
Thank you. I have been looking for the answer since long time. Even watch shop employees couldn't give me satisfactory answers. Some do specialize more on selling.
Been staring at my Seiko with the Tachymeter wondering, "How the heck to work this ?" This video makes me stop staring blankly and increase my staring productivity on my watch!!
Damn, what a great explanation. Before this video I thought "what's the use of such a thing, must be more a gimmick than anything else", but with this I now realize how handy it can be for certain situations. Thanx!!
Fantastic explanation! Please note that the speed calculated in example 1 is still the average speed of the car over 1km. If the car doesn't decelerate nor accelerate, then the current speed = average speed, but the read speed is still average. If the time passed from starting to stopping the chrono was very very low, then it would be the true current speed. Otherwise, great explanation 👍
Thanks for the excellent introduction. Just a remark: speed as shown in any speedometer always represents an average speed, or average velocity in physics term. You need to have a distance travelled against the time taken to calculate a value “speed”. That is, distance travelled per unit time. That is why Newton’s “instantaneous velocity” (speed in “no time”) is so contradictory and so difficult to understand (probably no one can really understand still) ...
In physics terms it would still be "average speed." Velocity implies speed + direction. Instantaneous velocity is change in position in "no time," not speed.
Instantaneous velocity gives you the hypothetical direction & speed that something would continue to travel at, if it immediately stopped changing speed or direction. To put it in car terms, let's imagine you are cornering, when you suddenly hit a perfectly frictionless ice sheet and lose all grip. Your car's centre of mass would continue to move in a straight line, at the direction and speed it was going when it hit the ice. The instantaneous velocity at any point in time is the hypothetical ice sheet scenario at that point.
@@bmjames you can use the current D-modules theory/language to deal with derivatives. The formal symbolic calculations setup is essentially what have been known as operational calculus from the 19th century, which is the rationale behind Heaviside’s calculus and most probably operational methods behind Ramanujan’s calculations. You can find recent attempts by G.C. Rota about rigorous approach on umbral calculus. But the D-modulus is a much better language.
It’s wonderful explanation, you’ve increased my knowledge regarding watches. When it comes non digital watches my side was its was useless watches for me. Thank you.
This is awesome. Thanks for explaining this so clearly and with several easy-to-understand examples. Indeed, these watches are tools and we need to use them to their fullest potential.
You can use it to check your pulse. Say "nil" when you start the stopwatch. Count 60 heart beats and read your pulse in plain text. (If your pulse is higher than or equal to 60 bpm that is.) But you never do that. You count 15 heart beats and devide the reading by 4.
Having seen tach watches most of my life (and I have one) I actually never knew what it was for, or how to use it. Now I'm gonna be staring at my watch and timing things everywhere I go until I get that out of my system. 🤣
Thanks for the explanation! Quick correction though, it would be the average speed. In a perfect world, the car isn't accelerating or decelerating, but in reality that doesn't usually happen. So calculating speed over a distance based on time would end up as an overall average speed.
Fantastic explanation of how to use the tachymeter. I have always struggled with this, not any more! Thank you. Absolutely love your videos, amongst the very best on UA-cam. Keep up the good work 👌
Spot on! Thanks for that! It was explained to me years ago but not like that. Now i understand. I'll start using it. Good stuff. Thumb up, subbed. Looking forward to seeing more. 👊👊👍👍🤘🤘
Thanks Peter for a very clear explanation. Usain Bolt can now calculate on his watch how long it takes on average for each person at his party to get COVID-19.
So simple, but I never thought to use in reverse with a constant speed to verify distance traveled, fantastic! And then the burger assembly example, time for lunch!
Awesome video! Very well explained. I am enjoying each and every video from the time I subbed ; I like your way of explaining different features or functions that has anything to do with watches, something very different from most UA-camrs who who simply review a watch and tell stuff, we mostly know, but still watch it to get a good idea of how the watch's going to be in flesh. I would appreciate a video on explaining in simple terms what makes the expensive watches expensive and uncovering some mechanical / automatic movements right from the basic movement. Another video may be on how to understand which watch will retain most of its value, given that as collectors we feel the constant temptation to keep buying one after another. Keep up the great work mate!
Most U.S. highways have mile markers. Unfortunately, tachymeters only work at speeds over 60. More practical for kilimeters than miles. A friend of mine used to have a Seiko with a tachymeter that "wrapped around" up to about 70 seconds. Worked better on roads with the old 55 mph limit.
@@benjackson6260 Easy, you just divide the time to get it within a minute and then divide the unit by the same amount. If you use 70 seconds to drive 1 mile, you can divide the time by two and read the speed and divide that by two as well. For this example you'd take 70/2=35. The indicated number on tachymeter scale at 35-sec mark is about 102, so that's 102/2 = 51mph. If you're biking, for example, and it takes much longer, say, 2m30s to complete one mile (that's 150 seconds): Divide 150 by 3 to get within the 1 min range, read the tachymeter scale and divide by 3 there as well; 72/3=24mph. You can measure anything per hour (or minute with some simple division) with a tachymeter scale, no matter how slow or fast. Last one I used was yesterday, number of golf balls shot on the range per hour. Before that my daughter wanted to know how many grey cars we would pass in an hour (way too many. We need more colours in the world.)
@@WreckedRectum I am not gonna lie... I really needed to read all that u said twice... But I got it...Its absolutely amazing... How u can measure almost anything no matter its nature or use using a series of numbers... It really makes u think that calculating everything around us in numbers is indeed possible... Like how many birds fly above someone's head per day, How many strangers he sees, What common words do people say around him... And replicate that to form a complete simulated world in which a real human could never find that its not real... It makes u think that maybe it's us who is making these hypothetical futures like Terminator and Matrix easier to achieve for the machines (if indeed such a thing does happen)... But yeah, puting all this number talk aside, we definitely need more colors man... I want a gorgeous shade of Aqua/Cyan for my Rivian... 😄😄 PS at least phones are still in cool colors and designs... Imagine them being all silver... Right...
Thank you so much for this video, I’ve always tried to understand chronographs but i could never find a coherent explenation as to what you can use them for. But your video has helped me understand so thanks
Thanks for the explanation. I feel the fact that you need to have known some of the parameters beforehand for this to be useful makes it rather impractical in real life. Say at a random stretch of road, you wouldn't have markers with a known distance, unless you prepare and measure it beforehand, without the markers the tachymeter would be useless. And how often do you have vehicles that travel in constant speed in real life? As for the hamburger example, since the tachymeter scale and the corresponding seconds are always constant, a timer and a picture of the tachymeter scale would do the job, you don't really need a watch with a tachymeter scale for that matter.
Well made video. The tachometer is a great little scale that is so under used and by simply not knowing how or even why!! This is what watch wearers need!! Kindest Bob England
Thabks for the explanation, I’m off to buy a Tag and not look silly. I asked the guy at the TAG store and even they couldn’t explain to me how it works
Peter, thank you for this info in your video. I finally now understand what a Tachymetre is and does. Both my Tissot and my Citizen eco drive has the Tachymetre scale....
honestly, it is not the function but the beauty behind the function. I love this similar watch bought in HK in 2017. and love it more knowing its utility
On behalf of everyone who’s seen this, thank you for such a descriptive and easy explanation of an awesome tool.
My pleasure
cheers
Brilliant explanation of how to use a tachymeter. This video has motivated me to get myself such a watch. Kudos
Thank you for this useful and beneficial video regarding tachymeter. There is only one thing;
To complete 1 mile distance in 28 seconds, our speed will be 128 miles/hour not 128km/hr.
Yeah I've just bought a Pagati moon watch so very helpful 🙂
What he said. I've had Tachymeters on watches for years, thought they looked cool, never knew how to use it. Until now. Thanks, man.
As an American, I was lost on Km/h, but once the hamburger analogy came out, I was in.
I am a veterinarian and I use this to measure the pulse of several animals. amazing tool
Tachymeter can also be used as a pulsometer with some conversion.
Once you feel a pulse, you start the chronograph function.
Count for 30 pulses (the starting one count as zero).
Then stop the chronograph.
By dividing the tachymeter reading by 2, the result is pulses per minute.
👍
A good multiperpous function to be certain, low tech, but effective
Great now I have to buy one, even though my phone can do that.
How stupid can you be !! you have counted beats for 30 seconds, just multiply by 2 , and you get beats per minute.Useless fellow .
you just need a second hand...count the pulse for 6 seconds and multiply by 10; that is it. did that for several years in med school...unless you are instructed to take the full minute on certain medical conditions.
Tachymeters went the way of the divewatch: many people own them, professionals stopped using them decades ago, and not that many people actually still know what they really used to be for.
I agree, most of my friends don’t know how to use them either 🤔
Oh, well do not tell Formula 1 or the pilot's association!
@@robinrobson5363 Pilot here... and AOPA member. No matter how well we my like the style, none of us actually use any pilot watch functions for anything other than basic time telling in the cockpit. GMT is about the only useful thing for pilots, assuming you're traveling international a lot. I actually use a chono and diver's bezel a lot, but mostly in the gym timing sets, or the kitchen when I've got multiple things going on the stove.
Well the divewatch function can be somewhat useful on a daily basis if for some reason you dont have a timer available,such as exams.
@@heathwasson7811 And assuming that the GMT function is actually easy to use because some GMTs are kinda of a headache to remember how to read them
Thumbs up to UA-cam algorithms for actually showing a McD's commercial right after his hamburger reference for using the tachymeter scale!!!
Hahahaha 🍔🍟
over the last 50 years...& with all the chronos i've owned...i thought it was some gadget for divers that just looked cool. so i learned something new today. 🙏🏽
That you, 72 just achieved my pilots licence and now armed with this my cross country navigation will be a breeze.
Thank for such an easy to understand instruction.
That is the BEST explanation of the practical uses of a Tachymetre ever 👏
🙏
I feel bad for the kid having his hamburger timed by a boss wearing an Omega
Haha..that kid needs to get his act together 😂
😂
Get a Breitling! If one desires to own a chronograph one should own a chronograph by a company devoted to chronograph movements years ahead of other watch companies. Breitling, instruments for professionals.
My thoughts exactly
That's why the boss is boss and he has an Omega 😜
🇨🇦 Mine is a 1972 Seiko Automatic Chronograph with a 'Pepsi' fixed bezel outside and an adjustable internal bezel ! Works perfectly, still stylish, self-winding and still totally accurate ! 🇨🇦
This is brilliant! The explanation is so simple yet it still hits home.
Also works on distances longer than 1. Multiply the timed result by the track distance. Example: Daytona International Speedway's oval course is 2.5 miles. If a car completes one lap in 45 seconds, the result would be 80. 80 x 2.5 = 200mph average speed.
THANK YOU!
How is that any better than Distance divided by time? Tachymeter is designed to show the speed you go at with a single look, not to do math :/
@@romrig4648 I was simply pointing out courses over one mile, kilometer, or whatever metric you are using. Plus, the tachymeter shortens the equation from distance/time X 3600 in those longer than one situations.
Yeah, because speed = distance/time. tachymeter scale = 1/time (in hours)
So distance x scale = distance / time (per hour)
Very well done! I’m a glider pilot and i just got myself a watch with a Tachymeter so your video was extremely helpful.
Thanks mate and cheers
You’re welcome 🙏
PETER, YOU ARE MAGNIFICENT!! AFTER ALL THESE YEARS OF PROFILING EXPENSIVE WATCHES, NOW I KNOW HOW TO ACTUALLY USE THE TACH FEATURES AND THE CHRONOGRAPH, EXPLAINED IN SIMPE EASY TO UNDERSTAND MANNER. SUPERB VIDEO. FIVE STARS!!!
LOL..thanks for the feedback Bill, appreciated 👍🙏
Cheers
Great stuff, we almost never used the tachymeter for anything but its looks so understanding its tool usage is nice. Like a slide rule, the more you use it the more it will become familiar.
Correct 👍
Very imformative. I thought I knew what I needed to know about the tachymeter before I watched the vid. I'm going to have to watch this again a couple of times to feel fully educated.
thanx for the explanation i love OMEGA so now its time to use my OMEGA to time how fast my wife can cook me some great tacos.
Kudos for pronouncing χρονογράφος so elegantly.
🇬🇷
Dude, all these years I've had fancy watches & cars and didn't think about the topics that you have explained in the video.
Thank you for adding to my knowledge.
welcome bro..👍
Great explanation... I just purchased a Chronograph watch because I loved the way it looks. I am thrilled to know I can actually use it to time my efficiency at things like preparing burgers or determining the average speed of a car in case my speedometer breaks. 🤣
Thank you. I have been looking for the answer since long time. Even watch shop employees couldn't give me satisfactory answers. Some do specialize more on selling.
Holy smokes! This guy just taught me ALL about my watch!!!
Lol
You’re welcome 🙏
This watch feature has been a mystery to me for a long time. Thank you for making this video and explaining how to use this feature.
Had my speedmaster 40 years and never knew how the tachymetre worked brilliant explanation
👍
The key is one single Unit of your choice, but it has to be constant single of the unit desired.
Excellent video!
Been staring at my Seiko with the Tachymeter wondering, "How the heck to work this ?"
This video makes me stop staring blankly and increase my staring productivity on my watch!!
Staring productivity is very important!
Damn, what a great explanation. Before this video I thought "what's the use of such a thing, must be more a gimmick than anything else", but with this I now realize how handy it can be for certain situations. Thanx!!
👍
Fantastic explanation! Please note that the speed calculated in example 1 is still the average speed of the car over 1km. If the car doesn't decelerate nor accelerate, then the current speed = average speed, but the read speed is still average. If the time passed from starting to stopping the chrono was very very low, then it would be the true current speed. Otherwise, great explanation 👍
Cheers
Wore these in my teens and 20s never knew what they are for. Just found it cool to show off.
Peter, great simple explanations. Thank you! I just went to my collection to see if I have one with a tachymetre, nope. Gotta get one now!
I have several David and I use them in a variety of situations, very handy :)
Learned a lot for this video...thanks gentleman
👍
Effective examples , I appreciated that you used both speed distance and worker examples to explain the usage.
Cheers
Superb presentation...throwing clear daylight on a most confusing subject!
Thanks for the excellent introduction. Just a remark: speed as shown in any speedometer always represents an average speed, or average velocity in physics term. You need to have a distance travelled against the time taken to calculate a value “speed”. That is, distance travelled per unit time. That is why Newton’s “instantaneous velocity” (speed in “no time”) is so contradictory and so difficult to understand (probably no one can really understand still) ...
👍😎
In physics terms it would still be "average speed." Velocity implies speed + direction. Instantaneous velocity is change in position in "no time," not speed.
Instantaneous velocity gives you the hypothetical direction & speed that something would continue to travel at, if it immediately stopped changing speed or direction.
To put it in car terms, let's imagine you are cornering, when you suddenly hit a perfectly frictionless ice sheet and lose all grip. Your car's centre of mass would continue to move in a straight line, at the direction and speed it was going when it hit the ice. The instantaneous velocity at any point in time is the hypothetical ice sheet scenario at that point.
@@bmjames you can use the current D-modules theory/language to deal with derivatives. The formal symbolic calculations setup is essentially what have been known as operational calculus from the 19th century, which is the rationale behind Heaviside’s calculus and most probably operational methods behind Ramanujan’s calculations. You can find recent attempts by G.C. Rota about rigorous approach on umbral calculus. But the D-modulus is a much better language.
It’s wonderful explanation, you’ve increased my knowledge regarding watches. When it comes non digital watches my side was its was useless watches for me. Thank you.
You're welcome 👍
This is awesome. Thanks for explaining this so clearly and with several easy-to-understand examples. Indeed, these watches are tools and we need to use them to their fullest potential.
Exactly.
I just got a Citizen Perpetual Chrono with Tachymeter for Christmas! I had no idea how to use it. Very clear and useful explanation. Thank you!
You really made this topic very understandable using easy to follow examples! Thank you, well done!
Glad it was helpful!
This was by far the best explanation of a chronograph/tachymeter I've come across. Thank you!!!
Glad it was helpful Peter, cheers
Wow that is a thorough explanation of tachymetre 👍🏻👍🏻
I love chronographs and Tachymeter's so i thought I'd share a video on how to use them, cheers
I didn't even know what it's called before this. Thanks for this one. Really helpful.
You can use it to check your pulse. Say "nil" when you start the stopwatch. Count 60 heart beats and read your pulse in plain text. (If your pulse is higher than or equal to 60 bpm that is.) But you never do that. You count 15 heart beats and devide the reading by 4.
Impressive info, this is what i use youtube for, thanks for making everything simple and easy to understand
You're very welcome!
Having seen tach watches most of my life (and I have one) I actually never knew what it was for, or how to use it. Now I'm gonna be staring at my watch and timing things everywhere I go until I get that out of my system. 🤣
Really excellent video, ive owned watches like this for ages but never had them explained so well.
Great video never knew how to use the tachometer on a watch just thought it looked cool!!! But a very valuable tool on a watch
I knew i could measure speed and distances, but didn’t know of the other useful stuff. Thank you so much.
👍
Thanks for the explanation! Quick correction though, it would be the average speed. In a perfect world, the car isn't accelerating or decelerating, but in reality that doesn't usually happen. So calculating speed over a distance based on time would end up as an overall average speed.
Great demonstration of a Chronograph scale!
I still cannot get over that Speedmaster... simply gorgeous! ❤️💨
You and me both! 👍
Fantastic explanation of how to use the tachymeter. I have always struggled with this, not any more! Thank you. Absolutely love your videos, amongst the very best on UA-cam. Keep up the good work 👌
Glad it was helpful Eddie and Thanks again mate 👍
@@PeterKotsa You're welcome mate, credit where credit's due!
I love how you even explain the greek origin of the word. Fantastic video.
Thanks Armando, glad you liked it!
Cheers
This has been a great tutorial! Thank you for enhancing my joy for watches with this masterclass!
my pleasure..enjoy the journey
Great video. I appreciate the clear description of using the tachometer. Now I'm going to have to get one.
Plenty to choose from that’s for sure 👍
Now I can use my Daytona and don’t have to leave it in the watch box. Thanks mate
Brilliant, enjoy it !!!👍
Spot on! Thanks for that! It was explained to me years ago but not like that. Now i understand. I'll start using it. Good stuff. Thumb up, subbed. Looking forward to seeing more. 👊👊👍👍🤘🤘
👍
Absolute great way to explain how a watch works.....just bought a watch after 40 odd years without one and thank you
Best explanation I’ve heard thank you 😊
My pleasure Carlos, glad you enjoyed it 😉
Excellent video, especially the introduction with the Greek terminology, Portokalos style. Your accent is definitely Greek. Χαιρετισμούς από Κόρινθο!
Να σε καλά 🙏
Thanks Peter for a very clear explanation. Usain Bolt can now calculate on his watch how long it takes on average for each person at his party to get COVID-19.
Hahaha, thanks Tim for clarifying mate :)
Peter, thank you for explaining the Tachymeter.
👍
Those guys who work at a burger joint when they see their bosses wear a chronograph watches be like 😶
hahaha..nice one :)
😂
Yeah 😂
So simple, but I never thought to use in reverse with a constant speed to verify distance traveled, fantastic! And then the burger assembly example, time for lunch!
Awesome video! Very well explained. I am enjoying each and every video from the time I subbed ; I like your way of explaining different features or functions that has anything to do with watches, something very different from most UA-camrs who who simply review a watch and tell stuff, we mostly know, but still watch it to get a good idea of how the watch's going to be in flesh. I would appreciate a video on explaining in simple terms what makes the expensive watches expensive and uncovering some mechanical / automatic movements right from the basic movement.
Another video may be on how to understand which watch will retain most of its value, given that as collectors we feel the constant temptation to keep buying one after another. Keep up the great work mate!
Thank you, appreciate the positive and constructive feedback. Cheers
This video is tremendously helpful. I got all my doubts and queries cleared. Thanks for such a detailed descriptive video. 💐🙏🏻
My pleasure..
Tachymeter is the least useful complication unless you're a race car driver in the '60s.
Fascinating explanation that makes all this money I have spent in nice watches, actually useful! Thank you very much for this.
Most U.S. highways have mile markers. Unfortunately, tachymeters only work at speeds over 60. More practical for kilimeters than miles. A friend of mine used to have a Seiko with a tachymeter that "wrapped around" up to about 70 seconds. Worked better on roads with the old 55 mph limit.
There are only 60 seconds on a watch.... Soooooo... How the 70 sec wraparound...??? 👀👀👀
@@benjackson6260 Easy, you just divide the time to get it within a minute and then divide the unit by the same amount.
If you use 70 seconds to drive 1 mile, you can divide the time by two and read the speed and divide that by two as well. For this example you'd take 70/2=35. The indicated number on tachymeter scale at 35-sec mark is about 102, so that's 102/2 = 51mph.
If you're biking, for example, and it takes much longer, say, 2m30s to complete one mile (that's 150 seconds): Divide 150 by 3 to get within the 1 min range, read the tachymeter scale and divide by 3 there as well; 72/3=24mph.
You can measure anything per hour (or minute with some simple division) with a tachymeter scale, no matter how slow or fast. Last one I used was yesterday, number of golf balls shot on the range per hour. Before that my daughter wanted to know how many grey cars we would pass in an hour (way too many. We need more colours in the world.)
@@WreckedRectum I am not gonna lie... I really needed to read all that u said twice...
But I got it...Its absolutely amazing... How u can measure almost anything no matter its nature or use using a series of numbers...
It really makes u think that calculating everything around us in numbers is indeed possible...
Like how many birds fly above someone's head per day, How many strangers he sees, What common words do people say around him... And replicate that to form a complete simulated world in which a real human could never find that its not real...
It makes u think that maybe it's us who is making these hypothetical futures like Terminator and Matrix easier to achieve for the machines (if indeed such a thing does happen)...
But yeah, puting all this number talk aside, we definitely need more colors man... I want a gorgeous shade of Aqua/Cyan for my Rivian... 😄😄
PS at least phones are still in cool colors and designs... Imagine them being all silver... Right...
Thank you so much for this video, I’ve always tried to understand chronographs but i could never find a coherent explenation as to what you can use them for. But your video has helped me understand so thanks
👍
Pretty good accent. Μπράβο
No bad eh...LOL
@@PeterKotsa seriously not bad. Very nice explanation of how to use a χρονογράφο.
@@pavlospiaditis8708 thanks bro glad you enjoyed it 👍🏻
Thanks for the explanation. Now I know the function of it, even I don't have a tachymeter watch.
Tachymeter in Greek means speed measurement. It’s also a Greek word.
Wow ! Your simplification by practical examples , what a job .
Don't give the americans any more ideas for units of measurement , 9:40
Thanks for the explanation. I feel the fact that you need to have known some of the parameters beforehand for this to be useful makes it rather impractical in real life. Say at a random stretch of road, you wouldn't have markers with a known distance, unless you prepare and measure it beforehand, without the markers the tachymeter would be useless. And how often do you have vehicles that travel in constant speed in real life? As for the hamburger example, since the tachymeter scale and the corresponding seconds are always constant, a timer and a picture of the tachymeter scale would do the job, you don't really need a watch with a tachymeter scale for that matter.
A survey among viewers: If you own a chronograph, have you ever used its tachymeter scale?. (thumbs up: NO thumbs down: YES).
Good question 🤔
I will now.
Thanks for your explanation... and ..... What a remarcable collection of watches you have!
What’s with the knife and wedding ring? Did you stab your wife and are now single??
Hahahaha
I’ll explain in a video shortly, it’s gonna take too long to text it here. Cheers 😂
Lol I thought my watch was broken until I saw this. Lifesaver, thank you :)
??
Thank you. Very informative. Now i need to use my expensive watch tachymeter.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for making this video. I have saved it for future reference. Now I want to find reviews of these chronographs.
Great stuff, I have 2 reviews here on my channel so far (the Omega speedmaster and Seiko speed timer) 👍
Superb. I loved the example with the hamburger 🍔
Well made video. The tachometer is a great little scale that is so under used and by simply not knowing how or even why!! This is what watch wearers need!!
Kindest
Bob
England
Excellent video, you have explained everything in the best possible manner.
Glad it was helpful!
Love the knife in the opening shots, cheers
Wow this was so informative I bet millions of people don't know how to use it
A simple, easy and very clear explanation. Thank you!
cheers
Explained brilliantly😊. Excellent presentation.
WoW! Best chrono class ever. Thanks.
You’re welcome 🙏
Thabks for the explanation, I’m off to buy a Tag and not look silly. I asked the guy at the TAG store and even they couldn’t explain to me how it works
Typical, most salesman have no idea about the product they are selling..😊😂
Peter, thank you for this info in your video. I finally now understand what a Tachymetre is and does. Both my Tissot and my Citizen eco drive has the Tachymetre scale....
Thank you very much for multiple example, it clear even for me being someone that understand stuff slower!
GREATEST THANKS RALPH 🙏.
Great explanation, will use my watch with more accuracy.
Thank you so much. The bloke who sold me my first Seiko Chrono, told me that the tachymeter is on all chronos, because its patented that way🤦♂️
First time to view your channel. Your INTRO is delightful.
Thanks..😊
honestly, it is not the function but the beauty behind the function. I love this similar watch bought in HK in 2017. and love it more knowing its utility
thank you po
This was great. I have never really thought about the tachymeter scale on the bezel. I have learnt something new today! :)
Brilliant brilliant video, Peter. It’s a revelation to me 😊. Thanks for sharing this knowledge.
Glad you enjoyed it 🙏
Thanks man 👍 I have so many watches with tachymeter now I understand what it measures 😁 big help and keep up the good work 💪💪