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Chase-Durer chronographs are the
choice of the elite of our fighting forces. Among them are the
121st Fighter Squadron, the 34th and 37th Bomber Squadrons,
the B-52 Weapons School, the USAF Precision Flying Team, The
Thunderbirds, pilots of the US Navy Top Gun School, the
Fighting Checkmate Pilots of the aircraft carrier, USS
Enterprise, and the 82nd Airborne Division.
A pilot watch is a wristwatch with special
features (compass, stopwatch, etc.), traditionally used by the
pilots of aircraft.
Origin
The first use of a wristwatch for pilots was by the Brazilian
aviation pioneer Alberto Santos-Dumont. While testing out his
new aeroplane in the early 1900s, Dumont found it necessary to
keep track of time. He asked his friend Louis Cartier for
help, and Cartier built him a leather bound wrist watch.
Dumont used his popularity in Paris to popularize the item and
sell it to other men.
Military use
Wrist watches gained more popularity in WWI, when officers
began to realize that they were more convenient than pocket
watches in battle. Also, because the pocket watch was more of
a middle class item, the working class soldiers usually owned
wrist watches, which they brought with them to their service.
Artillery and infantry officers depended on these watches as
battles became more complicated, because attacks needed to be
coordinated at precise moments. Wrist watches were found to be
needed in the air as much as on the ground: military pilots
found them more convenient than pocket watches for the same
reasons as Santos-Dumont had. Eventually, army contractors
manufactured watches en masse for both infantry soldiers and
pilots. In WWII, a popular watch of most American airmen was
the A-11: it had a simple black face and clear white numbers
for easy readability, and it met the aviator’s basic needs.
After the war, the returning officers kept their watches and
wore them back home, popularizing them among the middle class.
The middle class helped the item develop into more than a
means of keeping time. The standards for pilot watches were
raised, and they became much more advanced, including features
like chronometers and slide rules. (Chronometers are clocks
especially used in navigation, designed to have sufficient
long-term accuracy and precision, while slide rules are
mechanical calculators that can make rapid, approximate
scientific and engineering calculations, such as time,
distance and speed equations.) The popularization of the pilot
watch among the middle class also made it an accessory;
companies designed impressive looking watches out of stainless
steel, leather, and mineral crystal, with gold and silver
accents, elaborate faces covered in various numbers, rotating
crowns, and numerous widgets all in one package.

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