Gear’d Hardware ZX2 Features

This puppy rocks! A 40-year-old Model 659 S&W that I picked up for a song!

I’ve been wearing my Gear’d Hardware ZX2 watch for a few weeks now and I’m enjoying it.  The watch has stood up well after being subjected to lots of miles on the motorcycle and repeated poundings from the recoil of my .45 Compact, my custom Colt 1911 bright stainless, a .30 06 M1 Garand, a Marlin 336 Texan, a Ruger No. 1 in .257 Weatherby Magnum (finally got that one back from Ruger), and about a thousand rounds of hot 9mm ammo through a new-to-me Model 659 Smith and Wesson.  I’ll have stories on each of these here on the blog in the near future, but I digress.  In this blog, I want to give an update on the Gear’d Hardware watch and its features.

For starters, the Gear’d timepiece includes both digital and analog displays, which you can see in the photo below.  The analog display is consists of standard analog watch hour, minute, and second hands.  The digital display shows the date (day and month), the day, and the time in hours, minutes, and seconds.

The ZX2’s hands display the time in analog fashion, while the LCDs display the time digitally.  You can set the digital time to use a 12-hour or 24-hour clock.

When you press the upper left button, the digital display illuminates.  It’s bright enough to see easily in the dark, but not so bright that it lights up the entire area.  That’s cool, because I remember from my Army days that some watches can actually reveal your position if you light them up at night.  This is just right, in my opinion.

Pressing the upper left button illuminates the digital display.

There’s a mode button on the watch’s lower left, and that steps you through the stopwatch, the alarm, and the time setting functions.

The Gear’d’s stopwatch mode. The time starts and stops with the upper right button, and resets with the lower right button.
The alarm mode. You can set the watch to start beeping at a time you select.

One thing I noticed on the Gear’d watch is that you can set two different time zones, one on the analog display and another on the digital display.  This in effect makes the Gear’d watch a GMT watch (at least by my definition of a GMT watch).   I didn’t realize that at first and it’s not mentioned in the Gear’d literature, but it’s a powerful feature.  I travel a lot internationally, and it’s important to me that I know what time it is where I am as well as the time back in the United States.  I don’t want to call a client in the middle of the day when I’m in China and wake them up at 2:00 in the morning back in the world.  In fact, about the only kind of new watch I’ll buy these days is a GMT watch (that’s how important that GMT feature is to me).

Just to make the point, I set two different time zones on my Gear’d watch. In this case, the analog time displays 2:06, and the digital time displays 15:06. Being able to show two different time zones is a cool feature.

My Gear’d watch is running just fine, and it’s keeping what appears to be perfect time.  It hasn’t gained or lost anything since I first set it.  And it just soaks up the abuse I’ve been throwing at it.  I like this watch a lot.

That’s it for today.  I’m headed to the range.  As always, more to follow, and you’ll see it right here on the ExNotes blog.  Stay tuned.