Casio Men's G-Shock Classic Series Designer Blue Watch GA150A-2A
Model number: GA150A-2A
Item Shape: Round
Dial window material Type: Mineral
Display Type: Analog and digital
Clasp: Buckle
Case material: Resin
Case diameter: 51 mm
Case Thickness: 17 mm
Band Material: Resin
Band length: Men's Standard
Band width: 21 - 28 mm
Band Color: High gloss blue resin
Dial color: metallic blue
Calendar: Day, date, Month
Special features: Timer, Chronograph, Shock resistant, Light
Water resistant depth: 200 Meters
The unique 3-D design of these watches creates the appearance as if they've been chiseled out of stone, creating a look of toughness and solid power.
Their concave dials with half-gloss finish cast a menacing shadow over their dials and combined with the case and band's metallic colorway give them an edgy, streetwise look.
Metallic blue resin band analog and digital watch with metallic blue face.
Shock Resistant
200M Water Resistant
Anti-Magnetic Structure 1/1000th Second Stopwatch w/ Speed Indicator
Magnetic Resistant Auto LED Light with Afterglow
World Time 29 times zones (48 cities + UTC), daylight saving on/off, home city/world time swapping 4 Daily Alarms and 1 Snooze Alarm Hourly Time Signal 1/1000 Second Stopwatch
Measuring capacity: 99:59'59.999"
Measuring modes: Elapsed time, lap time, split time Others: Speed (0-1998 units/hour), Selection distance input (0.0-99.9) Countdown Timer
Measuring unit: 1 second
Countdown range: 24 hours
Countdown start time setting range: 1 minute to 24 hours (1-minute increments and 1-hour increments)
Other: Auto-repeat Full auto-calendar (pre-programmed until the year 2099) 12/24 Hour Formats Accuracy: +/- 15 seconds per month
An oversized G-Shock analog watch with an industrial-style display, hands, and subdial.
Double-prong buckle.
LED illumination and 4 daily alerts. World time with 29 city-designated time zones.
Stopwatch and countdown features.
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.