background image

MO1503-EA

© 2015 CASIO COMPUTER CO., LTD.

Congratulations upon your selection of this CASIO watch.

Applications

The built-in sensors of this watch measure direction, barometric pressure, temperature and altitude. 
Measured values are then shown on the display. Such features make this watch useful when hiking, 
mountain climbing, or when engaging in other such outdoor activities.

Warning !

 The measurement functions built into this watch are not intended for taking measurements that 

require professional or industrial precision. Values produced by this watch should be considered 
as reasonable representations only.

When engaging in mountain climbing or other activities in which losing your way can create a 
dangerous or life-threatening situation, always use a second compass to confi rm direction readings.

 Note that CASIO COMPUTER CO., LTD. assumes no responsibility for any damage or loss 

suffered by you or any third party arising through the use of this product or its malfunction.

E

E-1

ENGLISH

Important!

 Your watch’s Altimeter Mode calculates relative altitude based on changes in barometric pressure 

measurement by its pressure sensor. For more information, see pages E-51 and E-65.

 Immediately before embarking or otherwise taking altitude readings, be sure to specify a reference 

altitude. If you don’t the readings produced by the watch probably will not be very accurate. For more 
information, see “To specify a reference altitude value” (page E-56).

 To ensure correct direction readings by this watch, be sure to perform bidirectional calibration before 

using it. The watch may produce incorrect direction readings if you do not perform bidirectional 
calibration. For more information, see “To perform bidirectional calibration” (page E-30).

E-2

About This Manual

 Depending on the model of your watch, digital display text appears 

either as dark fi gures on a light background, or light fi gures on a dark 
background. All examples in this manual are shown using dark fi gures 
on a light background.

 Button operations are indicated using the letters shown in the 

illustration.

 Note that the product illustrations in this manual are intended for 

reference only, and so the actual product may appear somewhat 
different than depicted by an illustration.

E-3

Things to check before using the watch

1. Check the battery power level.

Is “

H

” or “

M

” displayed for the battery power indicator (page E-11)?

Go to step 2.

Power is low.

 Charge the watch by placing it in a location 

where it is exposed to light. For details, see “Charging the 
Watch” (page E-9).

NO

YES

YES

Does any one of the following conditions exist?

 Battery power indicator shows “

L

” and “

LOW

” is flashing on the 

display.

 “

CHG

” is flashing on the display.

 The face is blank.

The watch is charged 
sufficiently.
For details about 
charging, see 
“Charging the Watch” 
(page E-9).

NEXT

Battery power 
indicator

E-4

2. Check the Home City and the daylight saving time (DST) setting.

Use the procedure under “To confi gure Home City and summer time settings” (page E-20) to confi gure 
your Home City and daylight saving time settings.

Important!

 World Time Mode and Sunrise/Sunset Mode data depend on correct Home City, time, and date settings 

in the Timekeeping Mode. Make sure you confi gure these settings correctly.

3. Set the current time.

See “Confi guring Current Time and Date Settings” (page E-22).

The watch is now ready for use.

E-5

Contents

About This Manual  …………………………………………………………………………………………… E-2

Things to check before using the watch  ………………………………………………………………… E-3

Charging the Watch …………………………………………………………………………………………… E-9

To recover from the sleep state  …………………………………………………………………… E-14

Mode Reference Guide  …………………………………………………………………………………… E-15

Timekeeping ………………………………………………………………………………………………… E-19

Confi guring Home City Settings  ………………………………………………………………………… E-20

To confi gure Home City and summer time settings ……………………………………………… E-20

Confi guring Current Time and Date Settings  ………………………………………………………… E-22

To change the current time and date settings  …………………………………………………… E-22

Taking Direction Readings  ……………………………………………………………………………… E-25

To take a direction reading  ………………………………………………………………………… E-26
To perform bidirectional calibration ………………………………………………………………… E-30
To perform magnetic declination correction  ……………………………………………………… E-31
To store a direction angle reading in Bearing Memory  ………………………………………… E-32
To set a map and fi nd your current location  ……………………………………………………… E-34
To fi nd the bearing to an objective ………………………………………………………………… E-35
To determine the direction angle to an objective on a map and head in that direction 

(Bearing Memory)………………………………………………………………………………… E-36

E-6

Specifying Temperature, Barometric Pressure, and Altitude Display Units  …………………… E-40

To specify temperature, barometric pressure, and altitude display units ……………………… E-40

Taking Barometric Pressure and Temperature Readings  ………………………………………… E-42

To take barometric pressure and temperature readings ………………………………………… E-42
To enable or disable the barometric pressure change alert  …………………………………… E-47
To calibrate the pressure sensor and the temperature sensor  ………………………………… E-49

Using the Altimeter Mode  ………………………………………………………………………………… E-51

To select the altitude screen format  ……………………………………………………………… E-52
To select the altitude auto reading interval  ……………………………………………………… E-53
To take altitude readings  …………………………………………………………………………… E-55
To specify a reference altitude value ……………………………………………………………… E-56
To specify the altitude differential start point ……………………………………………………… E-57
To use the altitude differential value  ……………………………………………………………… E-58
To save a reading manually ………………………………………………………………………… E-59
To start trek log value updating  …………………………………………………………………… E-62
To stop trek log value updating  …………………………………………………………………… E-62

Precautions Concerning Simultaneous Altitude and Temperature Readings  ………………… E-67

Viewing Altitude Records  ………………………………………………………………………………… E-68

To view altitude records  …………………………………………………………………………… E-68
To delete all manually saved data  ………………………………………………………………… E-73
To delete data in a specifi c memory area ………………………………………………………… E-73

E-7

Looking up Sunrise and Sunset Times ………………………………………………………………… E-75

To enter the Sunrise/Sunset Mode ………………………………………………………………… E-75
To view the sunrise/sunset time for a particular date  …………………………………………… E-76
To look up the sunrise and sunset times for a specifi c location ………………………………… E-77

Using the Stopwatch  ……………………………………………………………………………………… E-79

To enter the Stopwatch Mode ……………………………………………………………………… E-79
To perform an elapsed time operation  …………………………………………………………… E-79
To pause at a split time ……………………………………………………………………………… E-79
To measure two fi nishes  …………………………………………………………………………… E-80

Using the Countdown Timer ……………………………………………………………………………… E-81

To enter the Countdown Timer Mode ……………………………………………………………… E-81
To specify the countdown start time  ……………………………………………………………… E-81
To perform a countdown timer operation  ………………………………………………………… E-82
To stop the alarm  …………………………………………………………………………………… E-82

Using the Alarm  …………………………………………………………………………………………… E-83

To enter the Alarm Mode …………………………………………………………………………… E-83
To set an alarm time ………………………………………………………………………………… E-84
To turn an alarm and the Hourly Time Signal on and off………………………………………… E-85
To stop the alarm  …………………………………………………………………………………… E-86

Operation Guide 3443

Summary of Contents for 3443

Page 1: ...the Home City and the daylight saving time DST setting Use the procedure under To configure Home City and summer time settings page E 20 to configure your Home City and daylight saving time settings Important World Time Mode and Sunrise Sunset Mode data depend on correct Home City time and date settings in the Timekeeping Mode Make sure you configure these settings correctly 3 Set the current time Se...

Page 2: ...ime signal and sensor operations will be disabled until battery power recovers Battery power will recover in about 15 minutes At this time the battery power indicators H M L will stop flashing This indicates that the functions listed above are enabled again If all of the battery power indicators H M L are flashing and the CHG charge indicator also is flashing it means the battery level is very low Ex...

Page 3: ...and CITY will be displayed in the upper display After that the currently selected city code and city name will scroll across the upper display Keep E depressed until the scrolling starts The watch will exit the setting mode automatically if you do not perform any operation for about two or three minutes For details about city codes see the City Code Table at the back of this manual 2 Use A East an...

Page 4: ...the indicated direction is northwest NW and 315 degrees for example the actual direction can be anywhere from 304 to 326 degrees Note that taking a direction reading while the watch is not horizontal in relation to the horizon can result in large direction reading error You can calibrate the bearing sensor if you suspect the direction reading is incorrect Any ongoing direction reading operation is...

Page 5: ...he map so the direction you want to travel on the map is pointed straight in front of you 4 While in the Timekeeping Mode or in any of the sensor modes press C to take a compass reading The reading will appear on the display after about one second 5 Still holding the map in front of you turn your body until north as indicated by the watch and the northerly direction on the map are aligned This wil...

Page 6: ...nt reading The vertical axis of the graph represents barometric pressure with each dot standing for the relative difference between its reading and that of the dots next to it Each dot represents 1 hPa The following shows how to interpret the data that appears on the barometric pressure graph Rising barometric pressure indicates that upcoming weather will improve Falling barometric pressure indica...

Page 7: ...ment reading interval one second five seconds or two minutes on the horizontal axis page E 53 To take readings of the difference between the altitude at your current location and the altitude at a reference point select Screen 2 See Using an Altitude Differential Value page E 57 for more information To select the altitude screen format 1 In the Altimeter Mode hold down E for at least two seconds SE...

Page 8: ...memory to store up to 30 manually saved records which are numbered from REC 1 through REC 30 To save a reading manually 1 In the Altimeter Mode check to make sure that an altitude reading is on the display If an altitude reading is not displayed press A to take one See To take altitude readings page E 55 for details 2 Hold down A First REC Hold will flash on the display After that REC and the curre...

Page 9: ...re is the chance of sudden altitude changes Do not use this watch for measuring altitude in applications that demand professional or industrial level precision Remember that the air inside of a commercial aircraft is pressurized Because of this the readings produced by this watch will not match the altitude readings announced or indicated by the flight crew 400 A B 400 A B E 67 Precautions Concerni...

Page 10: ...n is City Code TYO Tokyo Latitude North 35 7 degrees Longitude East 139 7 degrees Current date Sunrise time Sunset time Current date Sunrise time Sunset time E 76 To view the sunrise sunset time for a particular date 1 Enter the Sunrise Sunset Mode This will display the sunrise and sunset times for the current date at the location specified by the city code latitude and longitude 2 While the sunris...

Page 11: ...About one second after ALM appears on the display the display will change to show an alarm name AL 1 to AL 4 or SNZ or the SIG indicator The alarm name indicates an alarm screen SIG is shown when the Hourly Time Signal screen is on the display When you enter the Alarm Mode the data you were viewing when you last exited the mode appears first Alarm name AL or SIG Alarm time Hour Minutes Current time...

Page 12: ... off In the Timekeeping Mode hold down L for at least three seconds to toggle the auto light switch on LT displayed and off LT not displayed The auto light switch on indicator LT is on the display in all modes while the auto light switch is turned on The auto light switch turns off automatically whenever battery power drops to Level 4 page E 11 Auto light switch on indicator Auto light switch on i...

Page 13: ...r shows H or M E 99 Specifications Accuracy at normal temperature 15 seconds a month Timekeeping Hour minutes seconds p m P year month day day of the week Time format 12 hour and 24 hour Calendar system Full Auto calendar pre programmed from the year 2000 to 2099 Other Three display formats day of the week day screen month day screen barometric pressure graph screen Home City code can be assigned o...

Page 14: ...e BER Berlin STO Stockholm ATH Athens 2 CAI Cairo JRS Jerusalem MOW Moscow 3 JED Jeddah THR Tehran 3 5 DXB Dubai 4 KBL Kabul 4 5 KHI Karachi 5 L 3 City Code City UTC Offset GMT Differential DEL Delhi 5 5 KTM Kathmandu 5 75 DAC Dhaka 6 RGN Yangon 6 5 BKK Bangkok 7 SIN Singapore 8 HKG Hong Kong BJS Beijing TPE Taipei SEL Seoul 9 TYO Tokyo ADL Adelaide 9 5 GUM Guam 10 SYD Sydney NOU Noumea 11 WLG Wel...

Reviews: