| List Price: | $5,450.00 |
| Price: | $4,795.00 |
| as of Wed, 13 Feb 2013 12:50:33 GMT | |
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #89361 in Watches
- Color: black
- Brand: Omega
- Model: 1819.51.91
- Band material: Rubber
- Bezel material: stainless-steel
- Case material: stainless-steel
- Clasp type: deployment-buckle
- Dial color: black
- Dial window material: anti-reflective-scratch-resistant-sapphire
- Movement type: swiss-automatic
- Water-resistant to 330 feet
Features
- Quality Swiss Automatic movement; Functions without a battery; Powers automatically with the movement of your arm
- Domed, anti-reflective scratch-resistant sapphire crystal
- Case diameter: 41 mm
- Stainless-steel case; Black dial; Date function; Chronograph functions
- Water-resistant to 330 feet (100 M)
Amazon.com
The Omega Men's Double Eagle Constellation Black Rubber Watch offers self-winding chronograph movement with column wheel mechanism and a co-axial escapement for greater precision, stability and durability of the movement. This chronograph timepiece sports a rugged, sporty design that features a black dial offset with white sub-dials at the 3, 6, and 9 o'clock markers, and luminous dials and hour markers. The black stainless steel bezel is engraved with white Roman numerals, and the durable wide rubber band offers comfort and performance in extreme conditions. The watch also features a domed, scratch-resistant sapphire crystal coated on the inside with anti-reflective treatment and a calendar window at the 6 o'clock. The automatic Constellation is water resistant to 330 feet.
The Omega Story
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But Omega is more than just a fashionable watch. In 1965, the Omega Speedmaster chronograph was "flight-qualified by NASA for all manned space missions" as the only wristwatch to have withstood all of the U.S. space agency's severe tests, including passing grades for extreme shocks, vibrations, and temperatures ranging from -18 to +93 degrees Celsius. The greatest moment in the Speedmaster's history was undoubtedly 20 July 1969 at 02:56 GMT, when it recorded man's first steps on the Moon's surface as part of the Apollo 11 mission. Omega watches rocketed off to space on many subsequent missions, including visits to Skylab and the historic Apollo-Soyuz link-up of Soviet and American astronauts in 1975.
In more recent years, Omega created the world's first self-winding wristwatch with central tourbillon in 1994 and made history in 1999 with the first mass-produced watch incorporating the co-axial escapement, developed in conjunction with renowned English master watchmaker George Daniels. In simple terms, the escapement is the heart of a mechanical watch, generating the impulses that make the mechanism move. Omega's Co-Axial Escapement drastically reduces the friction among the parts that transmit energy to the other components, producing greater stability and precision and reducing service requirements.
Today, Omega is known for its rigorous testing of new movements, cases, and bands. Each new Omega movement is tested on the wrist in existing Omega models, while various laboratory tests are conducted to determine temperature-resistance, shock-resistance and vibration-resistance.




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