We feel most alive when we’re furthest from life’s routine. The
air seems fresher when we ski unmarked slopes, define our own
trail, or escape to our secluded fishing spot. Creating a
relationship with nature nourishes like no technology can. Timex®
Expedition® watches reflect the secluded terrain that inspires
adventure, and are built to endure the depths and elements you
subject yourself to.
Reminiscent of World War II-era aviation equipment, the
distinctive Timex Men's T49891 Expedition Metal Field Brown Dial
Brown Leather Strap Watch offers a rare blend of style and
strength that is simultaneously rugged and timeless. This
exceptionally versatile watch is equally appropriate in a
cockpit, corporate office or on a backcountry trail. Featuring a
brown dial, a brown genuine leather strap, and Indiglo® night
light for low lighting conditions, this watch is powered by a
high quality quartz movement and is water resistant to a depth of
165 feet (50 meters).
The Timex Men's T498919J Expedition Vintage Metal Field Watch is
an excellent timepiece that should definitely be brought home to
your collection. Featuring a brown dial and a calfskin band, this
watch is the epitome of style and utility.
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Timex Group B.V. is one of the best-known American watch
companies. Timex's U.S. headquarters are located in Middlebury
Connecticut and it has substantial operations in China, the
Philippines and India and full scale sales companies in Canada,
the UK, France and Mexico.
The company began in 1854 as Waterbury Clock in Connecticut's
Naugatuck Valley, known during the nineteenth century as the
"Switzerland of America." Sister company Waterbury Watch
manufactured the first inexpensive mechanical pocket watch in
1880. During World War I, Waterbury began making wristwatches,
which had only just become popular, and in 1933 it made history
by creating the first Mickey Mouse clock under license from Walt
Disney, with Mickey's hands pointing the time.
During World War II, Waterbury renamed itself U.S. Time Company.
In 1950 the company introduced a wristwatch called the Timex.
Over the next three decades, Timex was sold through a series of
advertisements which emphasized its durability by putting the
watch through "torture tests," such as falling over the Grand
Coulee Dam or being strapped to the propeller of an outboard
motor, with the slogan "It takes a licking and keeps on ticking."
With the help of former Olympic broadcaster, spokesman John
Cameron Swayze, sales took off. The company later became Timex
Corporation, then Timex Group and, to date, has sold over one
billion watches.
The company has remained very competitive and the Timex brand
continues its dominance through present day. Its primary market
remains the United States and Canada, although the Timex brand is
sold worldwide due to its ability to capitalize on its strong
brand image and reputation for quality.
One of the most successful and important features available on
many Timex watches is the Indiglo backlight system. Indiglo is a
brand name of Indiglo Corporation, solely owned by Timex for
licensing purposes. Timex electroluminescent lamps, branded
Indiglo, were introduced in 1992 in the Ironman watch line. They
were an immediate success. The Indiglo lamp uniformly lights the
surface of the Timex’s watch dials in a manner that makes the
dial read very easily in many different light settings. In some
newer watches the Indiglo backlight only lights up the numbers,
rather than the entire LCD display, which is achieved by means of
a specialized film that inverts the LCD transmissivity.
Today, Timex Group products are manufactured in the Far East and
in Switzerland often based on technology that continues to be
developed in the United States and in Germany. With a large and
varied line of watches, Timex has the style for everyone. From
the locker room to the board room, there is a great Timex style
time-piece for you.
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