You’re welcome dude. Doubt I’ll ever go to space too, but it’s a nice thought experiment. The spirit of adventure should always accompany this little hobby of ours.
You’re welcome dude. Doubt I’ll ever go to space too, but it’s a nice thought experiment. The spirit of adventure should always accompany this little hobby of ours.
I’m guessing it’s a-okay inside the space shuttle.
Wow I didn’t know that. I’ll read up more on this then. That’s weird though since I read before that the DW-5600 and 6900 are both approved by NASA for space missions lol.
The MRW-200H.
Of course your quartz/solar watches would still work in space. Mechanicals/autos should have no problem too; otherwise the Speedmaster wouldn’t enjoy the same fame it does today. Pendulum powered clocks won’t work in outer space, but I doubt that’ll be your watch of choice for your space adventures.
Adding to that, I also found this.
https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/14089/which-computer-monitors-will-work-on-mars
I honestly never thought about this before. Apparently the LCDs can freeze up in the cold vacuum of space. That makes sense as these were designed to survive Earth’s conditions lol.
Assuming the case is durable enough to survive outer space though, then a quartz analogue watch should work, right?